Kansas Historical Quarterly
Development of Common and Employers'
Liability Law in Kansas
by Domenico Gagliardo
May, 1941 (Vol. 10, No. 2), pages 155 to 174.
Transcribed by lhn;
digitized with permission of the Kansas Historical Society.
TWO fundamentally different systems of legal
relationships regarding liability for compensating industrial injuries prevail in
Kansas: the common law and the modern system of workmen's compensation. The
unmodified common law was the basis for settling all damage suits for only a few
years, as statutory modifications were soon introduced in the form of employers'
liability laws. The workmen's compensation act of 1911 established a radically
different set of principles and procedures, adoption of which was made optional.
But in employment not covered by workmen's compensation, the common law alone, or
the common law as modified by employers' liability acts, is still the basis for
determining liability. Furthermore, in the occupations covered by the
compensation law, employers electing to pay benefits as provided in that act may
in some cases plead the common-law defenses against workers electing not to
accept, but these defenses are not available to employers rejecting the
compensation law if their employees accept. Thus the common law, employers'
liability acts and workmen's compensation are all integral parts of our labor
code today. It is the object of this article to describe the development in
Kansas of the common law and its modification by statutes
THE COMMON LAW
The legal relationships between employer and
employee in Kansas regarding
compensation for injuries were at first determined by the common-law doctrines of
reasonable care, assumption of risk, contributory negligence and coservice. [1
]
DUTIES OF THE EMPLOYER
According to the doctrine of reasonable care, it
is the master's duty to exercise reasonable care and diligence in providing a
safe place in which to work, safe machinery, tools and materials, suitable
(155)
156 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
some one else, and the risks here concerned cannot be attributed to the fault
of the master. [8]
CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE
It is a general rule of the common law that
where the plaintiff's negligence in conjunction with that of the defendant
contributes to his injury, the plaintiff cannot recover. In Kansas, three degrees
of negligence were at one time recognized: slight, ordinary and gross. Slight
negligence did not bar recovery, [9] but ordinary negligence did, even though the
worker's negligence was less than that of the employer, unless of course the
employer's was willful or wanton. [10] A worker who at the express command of
the master incurs a danger not so inevitable or imminent that an ordinarily
prudent man would refuse to incur it and is as a result injured, is not guilty of
contributory negligence. [11] This "academic" classification of negligence into
three degrees came to be ignored, and was definitely eliminated from the body of
law by the supreme court in 1908, and the rule now is merely that, there is
negligence when "the care, diligence or skill demanded by the peculiar
circumstances of the particular case" has not been exercised. [12] Kansas courts
have consistently held that contributory negligence is an affirmative defense and
must be pleaded and proved by the employer. Where no evidence is introduced on
this point it is assumed as a matter of law that there was no contributory
negligence. [13]
COMPARATIVE NEGLIGENCE AND "THE LAST CLEAR CHANCE"
The doctrine of comparative
negligence, which is, briefly, that where both employer and employee are guilty
of negligence contributing to an employee's injury the worker may recover
proportionate damages, provided. his negligence is less than that of his
employer, has never prevailed in Kansas aside from statutory enactment. 14 But
the doctrine of the "last clear chance" is accepted.
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 157
and competent fellow workmen, and to warn of hidden or unusual dangers known
to him but not to the servant. [2] For an injury resulting from failure or
neglect to perform any part of this duty, the master is liable for damages,
whether the failure or neglect is his own or that of one to whom the performance
of this duty has been delegated.[3] But the master's negligence is never
presumed; it must be proved by the plaintiff.
ASSUMPTION OF RISK
The servant assumes all the ordinary risks and
hazards incident to or attendant upon his employment; that is, all those risks
and hazards which are purely fortuitous or open to common observation and are as
fully known to him as to his master, or which he is, or may reasonably be
expected to be, capable of knowing and measuring. 4 And even though it is the
employer's duty to furnish a reasonably safe workplace, machinery, tools and
materials, yet if any of these are deficient or defective and the employee knows
or should know of the deficiency or defect, and appreciates or should appreciate
the consequent danger, and continues in the employment without any promise on the
part of his employer that it will be remedied, or continues for more than a
reasonable time with that promise, he is deemed as a matter of law to have
assumed the risk of injury from such deficiency or defect. [5] Extraordinary
risks are assumed only if known to and appreciated by the employee. [6]
Two reasons are offered in justification of this
doctrine: first that, knowing he will be exposed to these risks, the servant in
effect contracts to bear them; second that it best promotes the public interest
by making injuries less liable to occur to the servant himself and to third
persons. [7] Floyd R. Mechem says the real reason is that a loss must rest where
it falls unless it can be attributed to the fault of
158 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
According to this rule, the test of wrongful
conduct is that if just at the very moment when an accident occurred or became
inevitable only one party had power to prevent it and neglected to do so, then
the legal responsibility was his alone. But if each had power to prevent it and
each neglected to use that power, then neither can recover from the other. [15]
FELLOW SERVANT
The widest common-law principle governing
liability is that every person shall be
liable to others only when he is at fault. The rule of respondeat superior, which
holds that the master is Vicariously liable to a stranger for the misconduct of
his servants, i. e., railways to their passengers for the misconduct of their
servants, is an exception to this wider principle. The suggestion that
respondeat superior might be interpreted to make the master liable to one servant
for injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow servant was first made in
England in 1837 by counsel for plaintiff in Priestly v. Fowler, but was not
accepted.16 In Murray v. South Carolina Railway Company, an American case decided
in 1841, it was held that respondeat superior did not apply in cases of this
kind, but the decision was divided, did not become well known, and did not settle
the question.17 The question first received mature consideration in Farwell V.
Boston and Wooster Railway Corporation, 1842.18 There it was decided that the
rule did not apply; and the fellow-servant rule, that employers are not liable
for injuries caused by the negligence of fellow servants, was firmly established.
The fellow servant rule was introduced into Kansas by the supreme court in 1871,
in its first decision disposing of a damage suit arising out of an industrial
accident to an employee. 19 Dow, a brakeman, was injured while coupling freight
cars, allegedly because the conductor carelessly, negligently and unskillfully
conducted the train, and he sued for damages. He alleged everything necessary
to recover except that he carefully avoided alleging that the railroad was
negligent in employing or retaining the conductor who caused the injury. An
elaborate and able brief was prepared by the defense. The action was apparently
brought for the mere purpose of getting the fellow-servant rule established in
Kansas. The court
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 159
In an exceedingly brief opinion, considering the
importance of the question
involved, the court held for the company. "It is probable," said the court, "that
both authority and reason are with the defendant." Why so? Because it is
the "policy of the law to make it to the interest of every servant or agent of
the railroad company to see that every other servant or agent of the company is
competent and trustworthy." Workers are in the best position to know who is
incompetent and careless, and either they should inform the company "of every act
of any other employee showing a want of skill, care or competency," or quit. If
an employee is willing to work with an incompetent or untrustworthy fellow worker
without informing the company, "let him bear the consequences." And if he is
willing thus to endanger the lives of other human beings, "he deserves
punishment." This reasoning showed but little understanding on the court's part
of modern industry and the position occupied in it by the worker.
For the negligence of a more fellow servant the
master is liable only if he
employs the servant without due inquiry as to his fitness; or employs him with
notice of unfitness; or, having notice of unfitness, continues him in his
service; or where the servant's unfitness is so gross and notorious that for the
master not to know it constitutes negligence.20
"SUPERIOR SERVANT" RULE
Because in modern industry there are many grades
of labor, it was inevitable that
in applying the fellow-servant doctrine it would frequently be difficult to
determine who are fellow servants. The superior-servant rule was developed as a
solution of these difficulties. Two theories underlie the cases involving the
rule. The first is that the doctrine of common employment is sometimes not
applicable because the negligent servant was of a higher grade than the injured
servant, the second that it does not apply because the negligent employee was at
the time performing some task which it was the master's absolute duty to perform
with reasonable care. Considerable confusion resulted.
That this confusion is reflected in the Kansas
decisions is not surprising. As
between co-employees, the Dow case seemed to establish
160 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
that only higher officers were representative of a company and that the
company
was responsible only for the negligence of these higher officers, but that case
did not clearly establish a. foundation for the superior-servant doctrine. The
distinction between superior and inferior servants was apparently made to lie in
the fact that it is the duty of the former to hire and discharge the latter. 21
In later cases, however, the master's liability was clearly based upon the
nondelegability of certain duties irrespective of the rank involved. The rule was
stated clearly by Mr. Justice Valentine, in words quoted as authoritative in many
states and by the U. S. supreme court, as follows
And at common law, whenever the master delegates
to any officer, servant, agent
or employe, high or low, the performance of any of the duties above mentioned,
which really devolve upon the master himself, then such officer, servant, agent
or employe stands in the place of the master and becomes a substitute for the
master, a vice-principal, and the master is liable for his acts or his negligence
to the same extent as though the master himself had performed the acts or was
guilty of the negligence. 22
But the clearness of this principle was dimmed
in subsequent decisions. In a case
involving injury to an engineer caused by the negligence of a section foreman,
the reasoning of the court is confused, but the conclusion was finally in line
with previous decisions. 23 In 1898, in a case involving injury to a brakeman
because of a conductor's negligence, the court held that the doctrine of common
employment was not applicable simply because the negligent servant was of a
higher grade than the injured servant. 24 This decision was based directly on
the United States supreme court decision in the Ross case, 25 already branded as
"extreme" by the Kansas court, 26 from which the United States supreme court had
already receded 27 and which it expressly repudiated in I899. 28 It was later
cited as authority for other decisions. 22 The theory was soon repudiated,
however, and the court readopted the theory that the master's liability is based
on the nondelegability of certain duties, irrespective of the rank involved.
30
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 161
It has been said that Kansas "is probably one of
the states in which an employer
is not absolved on the ground that the negligence of the vice-principal was
committed in doing work usually done by a servant." 31 But that is not and has
never been true. As early as 1905 it was held that `'A foreman under whom workmen
are employed is a fellow servant with the workmen when engaged with them in
accomplishing the common task or object." 32 Four years later, two laborers were
pushing a loaded truck which became stalled, and the foreman jerked one of the
wheels. The sudden turning of the shafts which resulted injured a worker. The
court ruled that this was the negligence of a fellow servant. 33 Again it was
held that a city park superintendent driving a team and wagon was performing an
act of a workman and that the city was not liable for his negligent driving. 34
Still later it was held that a foreman assisting others move a stove is a fellow
servant.35
CONSOCIATION AND DEPARTMENTAL RULES
Kansas has also been cited as a state where the rule of association or
consociation prevails. That rule limits application of the coservice principle to
those servants employed by the same master who are cooperating in the particular
work being done, or who are in habitual association or in such relations that
each can exercise some influence promotive of proper caution over the conduct of
the others and in this way provide to some extent for their own security.
Although discussed at different times by the court, this rule was not used as a
basis upon which to rest decisions involving fellow servants. 36 Nor did the
Kansas supreme court follow the "departmental" rule, which limits the doctrine of
coservice to those servants working in the same general department. The rule in
Kansas has always been that "all employees of the same master, engaged in the
same general business, whose efforts tend to promote the same general purpose and
accom plish the same general end, are fellow servants." 37 It was held, however,
that if different departments are so far disconnected that each one may be
regarded as a separate undertaking, then the rule
162 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
of co-service is not applicable. [38] Both the consociation and departmental
rules are offshoots of one of the reasons advanced for the rule adopted in the
Farwell case; namely, that fellow servants, because of their association in
employment, were so situated that each could observe and influence the conduct of
others, could inform the master of any misconduct, incapacity or negligence of
any other servant, and in these ways secure their own safety.
MODIFICATIONS OF THE COMMON-LAW RULES
Thus, under the common law, three elements are
essential to the existence of
actionable negligence on the part of the employer: (1) a duty on the employer's
part to protect the worker from the injury he received, which implies knowledge
of the danger and power to prevent harm, and realization that the employee did
not or was not likely to realize the danger; (2) a failure of the employer to
perform that duty; and (3) an injury caused by that failure. All three elements
must be proved by the injured worker, and the absence of any one of them bars
recovery. The employer has the three powerful affirmative defenses of assumption
or risk, contributory negligence, and coservice. That framework of law was too
narrow and rigid for an expanding and changing economy and statutory changes
became necessary. Modifications of the common-law rules in certain employments
began early in Kansas.
RAILROAD LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES TO PERSONS OR
PROPERTY
In 1870, railroads in the state were made liable
"for all damages done to persons and property, when done in consequence of any
neglect on the part of the railroad companies." [39] The language of the act is
sufficiently vague to admit of almost any interpretation. Was it the
legislature's intention to wipe out the contributory negligence and
fellow-servant rules? The supreme court interpreted the law to mean that a
railroad company would be liable for damages to an injured servant only when it
was negligent "as a company," but not for the negligence of a fellow servant.
[40] Nor did the act abolish the doctrine of contributory negligence. [41]
According to these interpretations, the act made no change in the
common-law liability of railroads to their workers, except that by confirming a
right to damages already existing put it on a firmer basis and in the class
of
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 163
rights which, as a matter of public policy, may not be contracted away. [42]
The exact purpose of this law was never clear to the Kansas supreme court, for
its wording was exceedingly general and therefore vague. [43] The chief justice
believed that it was intended to abolish the doctrine of contributory negligence,
which in his opinion would have made the act unconstitutional. [44] A study of
its legislative history reveals the interesting fact that the law was never
intended as a labor law at all. It began its career as a bill "to compel
railroads to fence their roads, or pay for stock injured," and was amended to
make railroads liable for all damages, but without any idea that its purpose was
thereby being changed. [45]
RAILROAD FELLOW-SERVANT LAW OF 1874
A second attack on the common law was made in
1874, when every railroad company organized or doing business in the state was
made liable for all damages done to any person, including its own employees, in
consequence of any negligence of its agents, or by any mismanagement of its
engineers or other employees. [46] Although liability was stated in general
terms, the act was intended to, and did, abolish the fellow-servant doctrine.
When first enacted, the law was practically identical with the Iowa statute of
1862 on the same subject. [47] The Iowa supreme court had interpreted the law as
applying only to those engaged in such work of operating railroads as is
hazardous. [48] Since this interpretation preceded the Kansas act, our supreme
court followed the general rule applicable in such
164 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
cases and adopted the Iowa interpretation as to its scope. [49] Furthermore,
if an employee knew that a fellow servant was incompetent or habitually
negligent, and, without protest and without inducement on the company's part that
a change would be made, continued to work with that servant, he assumed the risk
of such negligence and could not recover despite the law. [50] Judges have
generally interpreted such situations as being within the rule of assumption of
risk, and the law did not specifically abrogate that rule. [51] Contributory
negligence also barred recovery. [52] The act applied only to railroad
corporations. Individuals, partnerships and firms having servants or employees
engaged in hazardous work upon roads or trains of railroad corporations were not
included. [53]
The constitutionality of the act was duly
challenged, and upheld almost without argument. [54] It was challenged again in
1885 on the grounds that railroads were deprived of property without due process
of law, and denied the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the federal
constitution. Again the Kansas supreme court upheld the act. [55] An appeal was
then taken to the United States supreme court. 56
The company there contended that the law of 1874
imposed a liability without any wrong or negligence on its part for injuries
caused by the negligence or incompetency of a fellow servant, a liability which
previously did not exist and in the enforcement of which property could be taken,
and that therefore the law authorized the taking of property without due process.
In answer, the federal supreme court pointed out that a state may prescribe the
future liabilities of corporations organized under its laws unless its power in
this respect is limited by the terms of its charters. The law was held merely to
extend to employees the liability of railroad companies for damages suffered by
passengers through the negligence or incompetence of its servants. If hardship or
injustice exists in the one case it exists in the other, and relief lies with the
legislature. Railroad operations involve sufficiently peculiar hazards to
warrant
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 165
special legislation for the protection of employees and the public. The law
was held not to violate either the due process or the equal protection clauses.
The question of constitutionality was again brought before the United States
supreme court. The Kansas supreme court had ruled that a bridge carpenter injured
while unloading timbers was covered by the act. [57] The railroad contended
that bridge carpenters were not exposed to peculiar hazards incident to the use
and operation of railroads, and that if they were included within the scope of
the law of 1874, then the law Violated the equal protection clause of the federal
constitution. The United States supreme court insisted that although the worker
concerned was a bridge carpenter by trade, yet when injured he was performing
work which was directly connected with the operation of the railroad, and held
against the company. [58] Thus the constitutionality of the law was definitely
established.
An interesting situation arose in 1908 involving
the fellow-servant act of 1874. A railroad and an express company had a contract
whereby the express company assumed the risk of all costs and damages for injury
to its employees and agreed to hold the railroad company harmless from them. The
express company in turn contracted with its employees that neither the railroad
nor the express company should under any circumstances be liable to them for
damages for any injury received while at work on the railroad's trains. An
express messenger was killed in a railroad wreck and his widow sued the railroad
company for damages on the ground of negligence.
The trial court held the contract binding as
between the railroad company and the worker and gave judgment accordingly. The
Kansas supreme court upheld the judgment, on the ground that although the
railroad as a common carrier generally does not deal on an equal footing with its
customers and consequently a contract waiving liability will generally be
regarded as having been secured by extortion, yet in the carriage of express
matter a railroad company does not act as in ordinary cases, since the services
performed are of a private and not of a public nature. Therefore the contract as
between the two companies was considered valid; and the express company could
transfer this risk back to its employees as a part
of the employment agreement.
Three justices dissented from this position.
Shortly after the opinion was filed, Mr. Justice Greene, who had voted with the
ma-
166 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
jority, died and was replaced by Mr. Justice Benson. On a rehearing of the
case, Mr. Justice Benson voted with the three justices previously dissenting, and
the judgment of the court was reversed with direction to enter judgment for the
widow. The contract in question was declared void because the statute of 1870
making railroads liable for all damages to persons or property in consequence of
any negligence on its part put the right to damages in the class of rights that
cannot be contracted away, and because of the law of 1874 abrogated the
fellow-servant rule. [59] It was conceded by the court that at common law the
contract would have been valid.
THE RAILROAD LIABILITY ACT OF 1911
In 1911 the Kansas legislature adopted what is a
virtual copy of the federal employer's liability act. [60] The object was to stop
the practice by railroads of taking cases to the state or federal court depending
upon which body of law was the more favorable to them. [61] Railroads were made
liable in damages for injury or death to workers resulting in whole or in part
from the employer's negligence, or from insufficiency in the clearance of
obstructions, strength of roadbed, tracks, machinery, equipment, lights, signals,
rules and regulations, number of employees, or from any defect in any equipment
due to the negligence of the employer. The employer was deprived of the defense
of contributory negligence, but the doctrine of comparative negligence was
introduced and it was provided that damages should be reduced in proportion to
the employee's negligence. However, in cases where violation by any railroad
offIcial or any of the road's employees of any federal or state railroad safety
act contributes to the injury or death, the defenses of assumption of risk and
contributory negligence are not available to the employer. [62] Contracts, rules,
regulations or any other devices designed to exempt railroads from the liability
imposed by this law are void. [63]
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 167
The same rules of law control under both the
state and federal acts. [64] Since almost the entire railroad industry in Kansas
is interstate in character, the law applicable is practically all federal and
will not be discussed here.
COAL MINING ACT OF 1883
A series of mine disasters led, in 1883, to the
enactment of a law regulating the conduct of the coal mining industry. [65]
Miners and operators were consulted in drafting the bill, and there was no
opposition. [66] The act provided that a map or plan of every coal mine should be
made, prescribed detailed regulations for safeguarding openings, workplaces,
ventilation, escapement shafts and hoisting and signaling apparatus, established
the office of mine inspector, and made compulsory the employment of an inside
"mining boss" to oversee the ventilating apparatus, airways, traveling-ways,
pumps and drainage, and to secure loose coal, slate and rock from falling upon
the traveling-ways, and the appointment of a "competent person" to inspect
gaseous mines. A right of action was allowed for any injury or death occasioned
by violation of the law.
In construing the law in 1902, the state supreme
court refused to hold that because it prescribed the appointment of a "fire-boss"
and his duties, it therefore superseded the common-law duty of the mine operator
to furnish a safe place in which to work, nor that it made the "fire-boss" a
fellow servant of other mine workers. But it held on the contrary that the master
was liable for the negligence of the "fire-boss" in failing to perform the duties
imposed upon him by law. [67] Again, in 1914, it was held that a mining company
was liable for damages to a miner for an injury which resulted because a mule
driver neglected to deliver props needed to support the roof. [68]
As interpreted by the southern department of the
Kansas Court of Appeals in 1896, the law was held not to abolish the defenses of
assumption of risk and contributory negligence. [69] Later, however, it was held
that these defenses were abolished. In 1908 the state supreme court held that "A
miner, in performing the work assigned to him, although bound to exercise due
care for his own safety, may assume, in the absence of notice to the contrary,
that the owner and
168 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
the overseer have performed their duty. . . ." [70] And later, that the law
"in effect debars the defense of contributory negligence," that it "entirely
shifts the risks of the employment from the laborer to the employer. Care for his
own safety may impel a miner to watch for treacherous mine roofs, but he is not
legally required to do so. . . ." [71] That the law abolished the defense of
assumption of risk was definitely settled in 1913. [72]
ROAD AND BRIDGE LAW
A road and bridge law of 1887 which gave to
anyone who without contributory negligence on his part sustained damages by
reason of defective bridges, culverts or highways a right to recover such
damages, under certain conditions, from a county or township, was designed for
the benefit of travelers. [73] Yet it was held to apply to workers as well as to
travelers. [74] A law enacted in 1931 made state and local public corporations
except boards of education, fire or police departments, jointly and severally,
liable with their motor operators or chauffeurs for damages caused by the
latter's negligence while driving on highways in the course of their employment.
[75] That law was held to abrogate the fellow-servant rule. [76]
THE FACTORY ACT
In 1903 a factory act was passed which requires
that elevators, hoisting shafts and well-holes be secured, that stairways be
equipped with handrails and secured at the sides and ends, that certain doors
open outward and be kept unlocked, requires fire escapes, and provides for the
guarding of dangerous machinery and appliances where practicable. A right of
action for damages is given in case of injury, and in order to recover damages it
is only necessary to prove in the first instance that the accident resulted from
or was directly contributed to by the failure to provide the safeguards required
by law. [77]
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 169
Just what modifications this act made in the
common law did not appear for some time. As early as 1906, the Kansas supreme
court, following what it considered to be well-settled law, held that the factory
act did not exclude the defense of contributory negligence, [78] At that time
the question of assumed risk was not involved, and so, although mentioned and
discussed, was not decided. Some lower courts, however, proceeded on the theory
that the common law of assumed risk was in no way affected. [79]
In 1907 the question of whether the factory act
did or did not abolish assumption of risk was squarely before the supreme court.
[80] An exhaustive inquiry was made and great difference of judicial opinion
noted. In the leading federal case holding that such acts do abolish the rule,
Judge Taft had argued that since assumption of risk is a term of the employment
contract, to allow it where a safety act exists is essentially to waive the
benefits of the statute, and that considerations of public policy will not permit
such a waiver to be given effect. [81] The state supreme court had already
accepted these general propositions, [82] but it had never before had occasion
to apply them. It now held that in Kansas assumption of risk could not be pleaded
in cases involving a violation of the factory act. [83]
Three years after it had interpreted away the
assumption of risk defense, the court again considered the question of
contributory negligence. At that time the general rule was that factory acts did
not abolish this defense, and in conformity with that rule the de fense had
previously been held available. [84] But judicial opinion throughout the
country was undergoing a change, though that had not as yet proceeded very far.
[85] The Kansas court was by this time satisfied of the injustice of the general
principle, and aligned itself with the new trend by reversing itself and holding
the defense no longer available. [86] The court saw clearly the inadequacy of
the common-law doctrines as applied to modern industry. These doctrines, it said,
"took their rise at a time when shoes were made at
170 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
the bench, the weaver had an apprentice or two, and the blacksmith a helper."
[87] But "common experience everywhere, registered in tables of gruesome
statistics, affords fresh demonstration every day of the inadequacy of the
common-law doctrine of reasonable care to provide places and instrumentalities
reasonably safe against foreseeable occurrences to meet the situation of men,
women and children who must manipulate, and must work in the midst of, the
mechanical products of modern inventive genius." [88] The court held that "the
factory act cuts squarely across the common-law doctrine of reasonable prudence
and supplies that foresight in reference to the places, structures and appliances
which it specifies." It further stated that "to submit to a jury the question of
prudence and foresight where the law has been ignored [by the employer] would be
to reopen a subject which the legislature has closed by a final decision." [89]
It is interesting to note that the original bill contained a provision,
eliminated by amendment, excusing an employer guilty of gross negligence if he
could prove equal negligence on the part of the injured worker. [90]
The court went far in liberally interpreting the
scope of the factory act, which was held to apply to any worker regardless of his
rank or grade, to any duty of a worker, whether ordinary and general or
exceptional and occasional, and to any accident caused by the absence of a
prescribed safeguard even though such accident could not have been anticipated
with reasonable prudence by the employer. And the court went so far as to hold
that if an injury is caused or directly contributed to by the absence of
safeguards, then the plaintiff need not prove the practicability of such
safeguards, but that the burden of proving safeguards impracticable is on the
employer. [91] The act does not, however, add to the common-law rights of the
father of a minor son to sue for the loss of services resulting
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS
from an injury by reason of a violation of the act. Only the minor can
recover. [92] Because the act is chiefly remedial in nature and intent, rather
than penal, it is controlled by the two-year statute of limitation. [93]
The constitutionality of the factory act was
upheld by the state supreme court in Caspar v. Lewin as a legitimate exercise of
the state's police power. The remedy prescribed for its enforcement was held not
obnoxious to either the state or the federal constitution. An appeal from this
decision was taken to the federal supreme court, but it was dismissed without
consideration, per stipulation of counsel. [94] The constitutionality of the act
was later passed upon and upheld by the United States supreme court. A
superintendent of the Lawrence Paper Manufacturing Company, whose duty it was,
among other things, to provide safeguards for the machinery, was crushed and
killed by unguarded rolls. His widow sued for damages under the factory act. The
main contention of the company was that the superintendent's control of safety
details removed him from the class of employees protected by the factory act. But
the Kansas supreme court ruled that the act was intended to protect all employees
regardless of employment, rank or grade. [95] From this decision the company
appealed. It contended that the interpretation put upon the act by the Kansas
court was repugnant to the federal due process clause, because the
superintendent's employment contract provided that he himself was to see to the
safeguarding of the machinery. The United States supreme court held it strictly
constitutional to impose an absolute duty to provide safeguards of which no
employer may relieve himself by any form of contract.96 The company also
contended that the law violated the equal protection clause of the federal
constitution, because corporations can only carry out the duty of safeguarding
machinery by contracting with agents and employees, while individual employers
may perform this duty themselves. The supreme court pointed out the obscurity of
this reasoning, and suggested that it rested upon a misconception, for the law
imposed an absolute duty binding upon corporations and individuals alike.
172 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
RECOVERIES
No investigation has ever been made of the
amounts recovered by Kansas workers or their dependents under the common-law
principles of liability. The data are not available. No doubt only a few cases
arose where the unmodified common law was applicable, for legislative
modifications were made early in Kansas history. But the experience of other
states suggests that the percentage of recoveries and the amounts involved were
probably not great. The common-law defenses of the employer were almost
invulnerable. Nor has any study been made of the recoveries under the common law
as modified by employer's liability acts. Here, too, it seems reasonable to infer
that the experience of other states has been repeated in Kansas. The percentage
of recoveries was certainly greater after employer's liability acts than before
them.
Table I combines the recoveries in fatal cases
investigated in three states prior to 1911. The percentage of fatal cases in
which no compensation was received is high, amounting to almost a third of the
total. In almost half of the cases the amount received did not exceed $500.
Compensation exceeding $1,000 was received in very few cases. In some of these,
the figures were well above $5,000.
TABLE I.-Recoveries in 604 fatal cases under employers' liability laws in
three states prior to 1911*
| AMOUNT RECEIVED | N.Y. | Pa. | Minn. | Totals.
| Percent. |
| No
compensation | 93 | 89 | 14 | 196 | 32.5 |
| Less than
$100 | 23 | 113 | 7 | 143 | 23.7 |
| $100 to
$500 | 72 | 61 | 13 | 146 | 24.1 |
| $500 to
$1,000 | 16 | 41 | 6 | 63 | 10.4 |
| Over
$1,000 | 23 | 19 | 14 | 56 | 9.3 |
* 227 cases by the New York State Liability Commission; 323 cases from
Pennsylvania by Crystal Eastman; and 54 cases from Minnesota. This material is
taken from Rubinow, I. M., Social Insurance. . . . (Henry Holt & Co., New
York, N. Y., 1913), pp. 93-95.
Some idea of the small number of recoveries in
cases of nonfatal accident may be obtained from the following figures for
Wisconsin.97
| Cases | Percent |
| Received nothing from employer | 72 | 23.5 |
| Received amount of doctor bill only | 99 | 32.4 |
| Received amount of part of doctor bill
only | 15 | 4.9 |
| Received something in addition to doctor
bill | 91 | 29.7 |
| Received something but not doctor bills | 29 | 9.5 |
GAGLIARDO: LIABILITY LAW IN KANSAS 173
The following figures on recoveries in Kansas
are not adequate, but are offered for what they are worth. From 1871 to 1911,
when Kansas enacted its first workmen's compensation law, there were fifty-nine
suits settled by the state supreme court in which workers were awarded damages
for injury. The average amount of compensation received was $4,320. This appears
to be a higher average than is usually reported, and it is no doubt very much
higher than the average recovered in all cases, including those settled out of
court. For undoubtedly most accidents were either not settled for at all, or were
settled for out of court; and it is usually the cases involving large sums that
are carried to the state supreme court. The highest award was $15,000, which was
paid by a railroad company to an individual for the loss of both legs.98 The
average compensation awarded for nineteen fatal accidents was $5,135, only
slightly more than the average award for injury. This also appears to be larger
than the amount usually reported. The largest amount received for a fatal
accident was $10,000; the lowest, $500.
Supreme court records for the years 1871-1911
show that contested cases were seldom disposed of in less than three years after
the accidentoccurred. The average time was four years, both for injury and death.
In many cases there was a delay of five, six and seven years. Three cases were in
the courts for more than nine years, and one for more than ten years. Following
is a distribution of sixty-six cases definitely disposed of by the state supreme
court during the years 1871-1911, inclusive, on the basis of time involved.
| Less than one year | 0 |
| One year but less than two | 6 |
| Two years but less than three | 18 |
| Three years but less than four | 13 |
| Four years but less than five | 9 |
| Five years but less than six | 7 |
| Six years but less than seven | 7 |
| Seven years but less than eight | 1 |
| Eight years but less than nine | 1 |
| Nine years but less than ten | 3 |
| Ten years and over | 1 |
The doctrines of assumption of risk and
contributory negligence account for almost all the failures to recover up to
1902. After the defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk were
no longer available under the various acts designed to protect workers,
174 KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
recoveries became more numerous. This probably
helps to explain the willingness of many employers to adopt workmen's
compensation laws. Recoveries were based in about equal numbers on the grounds of
failure of the employer to furnish safe tools or equipment, unsafe workplaces,
and the negligent acts of an agent or vice-principal.
Notes
1. Another rule limiting recovery was the general maxim that actio
personalis cum persona moritur. That rule was abolished by the wrongful death
statute of 1868, which gave personal representatives of fatally injured persons
any right that the deceased might have had to sue for damages.-The General
Statutes of the State of Kansas . . 1868, ch. 80, Sec. 422, Article XVIII of
the Code of Civil Procedure. A supplemental act conferring the same right,
under special circumstances, to other than personal representatives, was adopted
in 1889.-Laws, Kansas, 1882, ch. 131, upheld in Berry v. K. C. Ft. s.
& M. Rld. Co., 52 Kan. 759. Principles to guide in the assessment of damages
were laid down by the supreme court. see Union Pacific Rly. Co. v. Milliken, 8
Kan. 647; A. T. & S. F. Rid. Co. v. Brown. Adm'r., 26 Kan. 443.
2. Allen v. Shell Petroleum Corp., 146 Kan. 67; west v. Packing Co., 86 Kan..
890. In a place where conditions and hazards are constantly changing as the work
progresses, the hazards incident to the work are assumed by the worker.-McCoy v.
A. T. & s. F. Rly. Co., 129 Kan. 781.
3. Dow v. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co., 8 Kan. 642; A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v.
Moore, 29 Kan. 632, 646; Brice-Nash v. Barton Salt Co., 79 Kan. 110; Tuttle v.
Detroit, etc. Rly., 122 U. S. 189.
4.Brown, Adm'r. v. A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co., 31 Kan. 1 ; Fritchman v. Chitwood
Battery Co., 134 Kan. 727. "The maxim volenti non fit injuria is a terse
expression of the individualistic tendency of the common law, which, proceeding
from the people and asserting their liberties, naturally regards the freedom of
individual actions as the keystone of the whole structure."-Francis H. Bohlen,
Studies in the Law of Torts (Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, 1926), p,
441.
5. Morbach v. Mining Co., 53 Kan. 731; Tachreppel v. Missouri-Kan.-Texas Rld.
Co., 134 Kan. 251.
6. A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Schroeder, 47 Kan. 315; Rly. Co. v. Johnson, 69
Kan. 721; Lively v. Railway Co., 115 Kan. 784; Monteith v. Litchenburger, 144
Kan. 70.
7. Dow v. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co., 8 Kan. 642.
8. Mechem, Floyd R., A Treatise on the Law of Agency . . . (Callaghan and
Co., Chicago, 1914), 2d ed., v. I, pp. 1210, 1211.
9. Union Pacific Rly. Co. v. Rollins, 5 Kan. 167; sawyer v. Sauer, 10 Kan. 466,
472; Gibson v. Wyandotte, 20 Kan. 156 (1878); Union Pacific Rly. Co. v. Adams, 33
Kan. 429.
10. Union Pacific Rly. Co. v. Young, 19 Kan. 488. Justice Valentine said in this
case: "There are we suppose a few exceptions where a person who has himself not
exercised ordinary care may recover, but these exceptions are very few."-p.
496.
11. St. Louis, etc., Rly. Co. v. Morris, 76 Kan. 836.
12. Railway Co. v. Walters, 78 Kan. 39, 41.
13. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Pointer, 14 Kan. 37, 50; Central Branch Union
Pacific Rly. Co. v. Walters, 24 Kan. 504.
14. Laws, Kansas, 1911, ch. 239, sec. 2 ; Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v.
Pointer, 14 Kan. 37; Railway Co. v. Walters, 78 Kan. 39. Rly. Co. v. Davis, 37
Kan. 743, does seem to lend countenance to the doctrine, but later cases
positively repudiate it.
15. Dyerson v. Railroad Co., 74 Kan. 528. See, also, Himmelwright v. Baker, 82
Kan. 569, and Whately v. Chicago G. W. Rld. Co., 123 Kan. 187.
16. 3 M. & W. 1 (1837).
17. 1 McMull, L. S. Car. 385, 36 Am. Dec. 268 (1841). 18. 4 Metc. 49, 38 Am. Dec.
339.
19. Dow v. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co., 8 Kan. 642, following the Farwell case.
specifically noted that more solicitude was entertained concerning the question
involved and in the precedent to be established than concerning the case itself,
and implied that the defense was responsible even for the presentation of the
plaintiff's case.
20. Railroad Company v. Doyle, 18 Kan. 58.
21. But see Bridge Co. v. Miller, 71 Kan. 13, 26.
22. A. T. & s. F. Rld. Co. v. Moore, 29 Kan. 632, 644.
23. St. L. & S. F. Rly. Co. v. weaver, 35 Kan. 412. see, also, Mo. Pac. Rly.
Co. v. Peregoy, Adm'x., 36 Kan. 424.
24. Walker v. Gillett, 59 Kan. 214.
25. Chicago, M. & St. P. Rly. Co. v. Ross, 122 U. S. 377. 26. St. L. & s.
F. Rly. Co. v. Weaver, 35 Kan. 412.
27. B. & O. Rld. Co. v. Baugh, 149 U. S. 368.
28. New England Rld. Co. v. Conroy, 175 U. S. 323.
29. Foundry Co. v. Secrist, 59 Kan. 778; Refining Co. v. Peterson, 8 K. A. 316;
Mirick et al., v. Morton, 64 Pac. 609.
30. Bridge Co. v. Miller, 71 Kan. 13.
31. Labatt, C. B., Commentaries on the Law of Master and Servant .
(Lawyers Cooperative Pub. Co., Rochester, N. v., 1913), 2d ed., v. IV, p. 4364,
citing Refining Co. v. Peterson, 8 K. A. 316, 55 Pac. 673. see, also, Clark,
Lindley D., The Law of the Employment of Labor (The Macmillan Company, New
York, N. v., 1911), p. 162.
32. Crist v. Light Co., 72 Kan. 135, Syl. 3.
33. Lunn v. Morris, 81 Kan. 94. see, also, Henry v. Boiler Works, 87 Kan. 571,
574.
34. Nelson v. City of Salina, 123 Kan. 522 (1227).
35. Barnaby v. sears, Roebuck & Co., 132 Kan. 447.
36. see St. L. & s. F. Rly. Co. v. Weaver, 35 Kan. 412.
37. Bridge Co. v. Miller, 71 Kan. 13; Burroughs v. Michel, 142 Kan. 814.
38. Bridge Co. v. Miller, 71 Kan. 13.
39. Laws, Kansas, 1870, ch. 93.
40. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Salmon, Adm's., 11 Kan. 83, 91, 93.
41. K. C. Ft. S. & G. Rld. Co. v. McHenry, 24 Kan. 601.
42. Sewell v. Rly. Co., 78 Kan. 1, 16, 24.
43. Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Salmon, Adm's., 11 Kan. 83; St. Jos. & D. C.
Rld. Co. v. Grover, 11 Kan. 302, 307; Sewell v. Rly. Co., 78 Kan. 1, 16, 21.
44. K. C. Ft. s. & G. Rld. Co. v. McHenry, 24 Kan. 501, 504.
45. senate Bill No. 13, session of 1870; Senate Journal, p. 455; Kansas Daily
Commonwealth, Topeka, March 3, 1870; Kansas State Record, Topeka,
March 2, 1870.
46. Laws, Kansas, 1874, ch. 23, sec. 1, effective March 4, 1874;
General Statutes, Kansas, 1876, ch. 84, sec. 29. It should be observed
that the liability established was not merely to an injured employee, but to any
one injured. Furthermore, there was no intention to make a distinction between
agents and engineers and other employees, or between negligence and
mis-management.-Missouri K. & T. Rld. Co. v. Kellerman, 39 Tex. Civ. App.
274; 87 S. W. 401.
47. Laws, Iowa, 1862, ch. 169, see. 7. Upheld as constitutional in
McAunich v. the M. & M. Rly. Co., 20 Iowa 338. The Kansas law was amended in
1903, to provide that notice of injury, |Kansas, stating time and place, must be
given within ninety days after its occurrence. Laws, , 1903, ch. 393. This time
limit was extended to eight months in 1905, and for injured Workers in hospitals
or under charge of the company or unable to give notice because of
injuries, the time limit does not begin to run until after discharge from the
hospital or from the care of the company. such notice may be served upon any
person designated by the railroad company, upon certain specified persons, or by
leaving a copy at any of the company's depots, in the county in which the action
is brought, with the ticket agent, or the person in charge. It need not state
whether or not the worker intends to bring suit.-Laws, Kansas, 1905, ch. 341,
sets. 1, 2. In 1207 it was provided that notice was unnecessary where an action
was commenced within eight months after injury, or when the injured employee died
within that time as a result of his injuries.-Laws, Kansas, 1907, ch. 281,
sec. 1.
48. In Deppe v. The Chicago R. I. & P. Rld. Co., 38 Iowa 522, 595, it was
held that unless limited to those engaged in the hazardous work of operating
railroads, the act would be manifestly unconstitutional as class legislation.
49. Union Trust Co. v. Thomason, 25 Kan. 1.
50. McQueen v. C. B. U. P. R. C., 30 Kan. 689; Jackson v. K. C. L. & S. K.
Co. Kan. 761; Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Peavy, 29 Kan. 169; Railway Co. v.
Green, 75 Kan. 504, 513.
51. Railway Co. v. sledge, 68 Kan. 321; Brinkmeier v. Railway Co., 69 Kan.
738.
52. Union Pacific Rly. Co. v. Young, 19 Kan. 488. / . the plaintiff must have
exercised ordinary care, and not have been guilty of ordinary negligence, or he
cannot recover." -p. 496. see, also, Mo. Pac. Rly. Co. v. Mackey, 33 Kan.
298.
53. Beeson v. Busenbark, 44 Kan. 669.
54. Mo. Pac. Rly. Co. v. Haley, Adm'r., etc., 25 Kan. 35.
55. Mo. Pac. Rly. Co. v. Mackey, 33 Kan. 298.
56. Missouri Rly. Co. v. Mackey, 127 U. S. 205. Meanwhile the act had again been
upheld by the Kansas court in A. T. & s. F. Rid. Co. v. Koehler, 37 Kan.
463.
57. C. K. & W. Rid. Co. v. Pontius, 52 Kan. 264. A stonemason employed on a
depot was held not covered:-Railway Co. v. Medaris, 60 Kan. 151.
58, Chicago, etc., Rid. Co. v. Pontius, 157 U. S. 209.
59. Sewell v. Railway Co., 78 Kan. 16; Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Peavy, 29 Kan.
169; Railway Co. v. Fronk, 74 Kan. 519. The railroad company carried this case to
the United States supreme court, but it was dismissed with costs on motion of the
railroad company's counsel.-215 U. S. 612.
60. Laws, Kansas, 1911, ch. 239.
61. Topeka Daily Capital, February 25, 1911.
62. Defenbaugh v. Railroad Co., 102 Kan. 569. There have been very few Kansas
acts prescribing detailed requirements for the safety of railroad employees.
Frogs, switches and guardrails on tracks must be filled, blocked and guarded in a
proper manner. Laws, Kansas, 1909, ch. 188. Sheds must be erected over tracks
used exclusively to build or repair railroad equipment at division points where
shops are located, to protect all men permanently employed.-Laws, Kansas, 1907,
ch. 283. Detailed regulations are laid down regarding the construction of way
cars or cabooses. Revised Statutes, Kansas, 1923, sees. 66-220. Attempts to enact
full-crew and train-limit bills failed. House Journal, Kansas, 1913, H. B. 286
and 908.
63. The legislature made no attempt to fit the act into the scheme of laws
already existing, but left that difficult task to the state supreme court. An
analysis of the problem will be found in Fuller v. A. T. & S. F. Rly. Co.,
124 Kan. 66. Other important cases in which the act was applied are: Palomino v.
Railway Co., 91 Kan. 556; Hisle v. Railway Co., 91 Kan. 572; Rockhold v. Railway
Co., 97 Kan. 715; Harwood v. Railway Co., 101 Kan. 215; Defenbaugh v. Railroad
Co., 102 Kan. 560.
64. Kasper v. Railway Co., 111 Kan. 267; Koshka v. Railroad Co., 114 Kan.
126.
65. Laws, Kansas, 1883, ch. 117.
66. Topeka Daily Capital, February 23 and 24, 1883.
67. Schmalstieg v. Coal Co., 65 Kan. 753; see, also, Cheek v. Rly. Co., 89 Kan.
247, 267. Relatively few cases have been brought under the mining act, and these
for the most part not until after 1900.
68. LeRoy v. Rly. Co., 91 Kan. 548.
69. Cherokee & P. Coal & Mining Co. v. Britton, 3 K. A. 292; 45 Pac.
100.
70. Barrett v. Dessy, 78 Kan. 642, Syl. 4.
71. Baisdrenghein v. Rly. Co., 91 Kan. 730.
72. Cheek v. Rly. Co., 89 Kan. 247, 267, 268, following the line of reasoning
previously applied to the factory act, for which see below.
73. Laws, Kansas, 1887, ch. 237; General Statutes, Kansas, 1897, ch. 42, sec.
48.
74. Vickers v. Cloud County, 59 Kan. 86; Cloud County v. Vickers, 62 Kan. 25;
Hollinger v. Dickinson County, 115 Kan. 92.
75. Laws, Kansas, 1931, ch. 80, sec. 23.
76. Cashin v. State Highway Comm., 136 Kan. 659, Mr. Justice Burch
dissenting.
77. Laws, Kansas, 1903, ch. 356. None of its sections was borrowed from any other
state, and this left the supreme court free to follow its own ideas in
interpreting it. Two years later an act for the protection of building workers
was passed. Any workman noticing dangerous or defective scaffolding, staging or
other supporting appliances, elevator, derrick or hoist, or missing or improper
safeguards on construction, repairing or painting jobs, may report the same to
the state factory inspector, who is required to make an inspection and notify the
proper person of any defects that should be remedied. The person in charge must
then remove the danger, and failure or refusal to do so is made a misdemeanor
punishable by a heavy fine. Laws, Kansas, 1905, ch. 527.
78. Madison v. Clippinger, 74 Kan. 700.
79. Ibid.,; also Manufacturing Co. v. Daniels, 72 Kan. 418.
80. Manufacturing Co. v. Bloom, 76 Kan. 127.
81. Narramore v. Cleveland, C. C. & St. L. Rly. Co., 96 Fed. 298.
82. The first in Railway Co. v. Bancord, 66 Kan. 81; the second in Kansas Pacific
Rly. Co. v. Peavey, 29 Kan. 170.
83. Manufacturing Co. v. Bloom, 76 Kan. 127.
84. Madison v. Clippinger, supra.
85. Labatt, op. cit., v. V, p. 5047.
86. Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604. Just three months before the court had remarked
that "The statute . . fairly admits of a construction which would exclude
contributory negligence as a defense as well as assumed risk, but does not do so
expressly, and the courts have presumed that such was not the intent and have
permitted the commonlaw defense."-Lewis v. Salt Company, 82 Kan. 163, 167.
87. Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 631, 632. Three years later the court said: "The
doctrines of assumption of risk and contributory negligence are not the creatures
of any constitution or of any legislative enactment. They are court-made rules,
invented to meet certain ideals of justice respecting certain social and economic
conditions and relations. Should the conditions and relations be completely
changed, and those ideals wholly fail of realization, the reason for the rules,
which is the life of all rules of the common law, would then be wanting, and the
court which would go on enforcing them would be a conscious minister of injustice
and not of justice."-Burgin v. Railway Co., 90 Kan. 194, 198 (1913).
88. Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 624.
89. Ibid., p. 625.
90. Senate Bills, Kansas Legislature, 1903, Bill No. 4.
91. Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604, overruling part of Henschell v. Rly. Co., 78
Kan. 411. To this two justices dissented, holding that the plaintiff would still
have to prove safeguards practicable. See, also, Gambill v. Bowen, 82 Kan. 840,
and Slater v. Rly. Co., 91 Kan. 226, 237. It has been held that an employee
injured while at rest under the direction of the employer is engaged in the
performance of duty and included within the act.-Brick Co. v. Fisher, 79 Kan.
576. The court refused to limit the scope of the act by interpreting that section
requiring belt shifters or safe mechanical contrivances for throwing on or off
belts or pulleys as applying only to workmen engaged in shifting belts, but
interpreted it to apply also to workers operating the machine.-Rank v. Packing
Box Co., 92 Kan. 917.
92. Gibson v. Packing Box Co., 85 Kan. 346.
93. Slater v. Railway Co., 91 Kan. 226.
94. Lewin v. Caspar, 223 U. S. 736.
95. Smith v. Bowersock, 95 Kan. 96, following Caspar v. Lewin.
96. Bowersock v. Smith, 243 U. S. 29.
97. Taken from James H. Boyd, Workmen's Compensation and Insurance (1912),
v. 1, p. 61.
98. Dowell v. Railway Co., 83 Kan. 562. This is a striking example of the wide
discrepancy that is often found in the amounts awarded for injuries by juries. In
not a single case of death in Kansas, so far as the data available to the writer
go, did the award exceed $10,000; and injuries more serious than the one
sustained in this case, and under circumstances as bad or worse, were awarded
much less. The next highest amount of compensation awarded for injuries was
$12,000.-See Railway Co. v. Lloyd, 68 Kan. 369.
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