The following opinion was filed March 17, 1914:
Maeshall, J.Questions raised by appellant’s counsel and not mentioned in this opinion, are to be regarded as having been passed as not of sufficient consequence to merit a place in the record of this case.
The faults which the jury found defendant guilty of, resulting in decedent’s death, were failure to perform the statutory duties of an employer to furnish his employee a place of employment “as free from dangers to life and safety as the-*447nature of tbe employment would reasonably permit” and ■“adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render the employment and place of employment of the deceased safe.” Those requisites are found in secs. 2394 — 48 and 2394 — 49, Stats. They are a part of the new system in relation to industrial accidents adopted by chs. 485 and 664, Laws of 1911, whereby the common defenses of assumption of risk and negligence of fellow-servants were abolished, employers, with some exceptions, were given the option to surrender the right to the defense of contributory negligence and submit to liability, according to legislative standards, practicably on a basis of insurance, for all losses to employees and their immediate dependents specified, caused by personal injuries, not self-inflicted, happening in their line of employment, and the standard of care to be exercised by employers as to safety of employment, safety of working place, and protection against danger, both as to the employment and the working place during working operations, was particularly prescribed, and the industrial commission was empowered to supervise employments and places of employment and make •and enforce orders and regulations needed, or appropriate, to enforce the statutory duties of employers.
Thus the whole field wherein employees in the course of their employment may be injured, was covered, — common-law standards of compensation, recoverable in the common-law way, being left undisturbed as to any employer not coming under the new system so as to waive the defense of contributory negligence, — the absolute duty was created of accomplishing physical results for prevention of industrial accidents, and the industrial commission was empowered with authority to supervise and coerce as to performance of such •duties. The legislative purpose is manifest. The language •creating the duties mentioned is broad, general, and in unmistakable words of positive command.
Counsel for appellant contend that the trial court dealt *448with tbe 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 employees, 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 see. 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 lit*449eral sense of words, cast on them. The language in such sense, is not ambiguous under the circumstances characterizing its use. Erom the viewpoint of modern conditions, modern needs, and modem 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 hut a link in a chain reaching from the field of production in which it accrued to and terminating with that of consumption, — ¿11 cast of unreasonable burdén 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. Koepp v. Nat. E. & S. Co. 151 Wis. 302, 139 N. W. 179; Kosidowski v. Milwaukee, 152 Wis. 223, 139 N. W. 187. The progressive tendency in that regard appears strikingly significant by the change in 1913 of the Statutes of 1911 so as to abolish the defense of contributory negligence in cases of this sort.
So whether there was evidence to carry the questions submitted to the jury in the language of the statute as to alleged *450fault of respondent cannot be tested merely by wbat was reasonably necessary to tbe safety of decedent’s working place, and his immunity from danger of harm in the course of his operations, nor the essential under common-law rules 'of a reasonably safe working place, nor by any other standard than that of the statute. By that standard there was ample evidence to go to the jury as to responsible fault of appellant. It would be very difficult to say, as matter of law, when the physical conditions and acts requisite to fully satisfy the statutory requirements appear conclusively by evidence. The legislature evidently endeavored to remove the question as exclusively as practicable into the field of jury interference. It left the field for the court far too narrow to include this case. To demonstrate that we need not refer to the evidence in detail. Its general character, indicated in the statement, is sufficient. Indeed, we understand from counsel’s argument they do not really claim there was not evidence to carry the questions submitted as to fault of defendant, to the jury, if the statutory duties we have discussed aj)ply; and of that we have no doubt.
One of the efficient violations of duty charged by respondent and denied by appellant, is failure to warn decedent of the danger which resulted in his death. The evidence was directed to that point as one vital to respondent’s right to recover. Appellant’s counsel by several requests for submission of questions in the special verdict — including one as to whether decedent was not specifically ordered not to work at the particular place, but go to another specified, where there was no overhang of frozen ore — efficiently challenged the court’s attention to this important phase of the case. The requests were not only refused but the instruction on the subject of contributory negligence did not cure the omission.
It is no answer to the contention of appellant’s counsel to say that whether there was efficient fault on respondent’s part in failure, as alleged, to warn, is mere evidentiary matter *451bearing on safety of place of employment, safeguarding thereof and of employees during performance of tbeir labor, and contributory negligence. No fact is merely evidentiary which is a legitimate basic ground of a cause of action or defense, and is properly pleadable as such. When such a fact is specifically or inferentially plainly pleaded and denied by answer, or is raised on the trial by evidence and enters into the case to all intents and purposes the same as if pleaded, it is neither in the nature of a conclusion of law or mixed law and fact, or merely evidentiary matter; but is a “fact” within the meaning of sec. 2857, Stats. 1911, providing that a special verdict is one “where the jury find the facts only, leaving the judgment to the court,” and the issue in respect thereto one of the “material issues of fact,” to be established by evidence and required under see. 2858, Stats. 1911, to be submitted to the jury in the form of a question in such form as to admit “of a direct answer.” All such facts, as distinguished from mere conflicts in evidence, and only such, are to be so submitted. The statute, in very plain language, requires that and practically prohibits such submission of any other matter, and this court has thus dealt with the statute so 'many times as to leave little or no room for excuse for not following its command.
Upon counsel making a proper demand for a special verdict he secures for his client the benefits of a statutory right. Judicial conservation of that right, by carefully following the requirements of the statute in framing the verdict so as to include therein all which should be included, and exclude all which should be excluded, submitting a question, covering in concise plain language, admitting of a direct answer for each issue of fact raised by the pleading and controverted by the evidence, or pleadable and properly raised by evidence, and guarding carefully against double questions and questions calculated to invite inconsistent answers, — will make the special-verdict law the valuable instrumentality the framers of *452the Code designed it to be. Like many features of tbe written as well as of the unwritten law, most of the difficulties attending its application are faults of administration which may easily be remedied by courts, instead of fault in the law.
■What has been said as to the nature of a special verdict and the importance of care in according the statutory right, not adding thereto nor taking therefrom, is but a reiteration of what has been said many times before, but seems appropriate to be repeated occasionally, to the end that justice may not miscarry by failure to comply with the plainly judicially expounded statute. The decisions of this court on the subject have been so numerous that reference to them now is deemed unnecessary and inadvisable.
True, in a broad sense, the-question of safe working place, and efficient conservation of safety during working operations, includes the subject of warning against dangei’s, and notice not to work in a dangerous place as, also, the subject of contributory negligence; but, nevertheless, failure to warn being pleaded, as in this case, as a substantive ground of liability, it is a fact in issue rather than mere evidentiary matter. Therefore, it was plain error not to submit a question on the subject. Sufferling v. Heyl & Patterson, 139 Wis. 510, 516, 121 N. W. 251; Harper v. Holcomb, 146 Wis. 183, 194, 130 N. W. 1128; Szewczyk v. E. W. Ellis L. Co. 146 Wis. 452, 459, 131 N. W. 977; Wawrzyniakowski v. Hoffman & B. Mfg. Co. 146 Wis. 153, 162, 131 N. W. 429.
While failure to submit a question covering some particular material issue of fact may sometimes be cured by instructions, the better practice is to follow the statute strictly, Wawrzyniakowski v. Hoffman & B. Mfg. Co., supra; but where the difficulty is not thus obviated the error is of serious nature. That here falls within such class. There was a refusal to submit the question of warning, notwithstanding evidence tending to prove that decedent was ordered to cease working in the place of danger and go to another, pointed out as free from peril; and the jury were so instructed on the *453questions of contributory negligence as to suggest that all testified to as to admonishment of the decedent might be true, and yet he not have been guilty of contributory negligence.
It may be that, since it was appellant’s duty not to permit decedent to work in a place not as free from danger as the nature of the employment would permit, he might have been merely warned against the peril which he was in and yet not have been guilty of contributory negligence, as matter of law, in continuing his work. In that respect the common-law rule, recognized in many cases, in view of the statutory duty of the defendant to go further than to merely warn of danger, — to go to the extent of warning of such emphatic character as to take the cast of prohibiting continuance in the place of danger, would not necessarily govern. But a warning of such emphatic character as the one testified to and neglect to heed it would involve efficient contributory fault. So there was no way the court could have rendered failure to submit the question under discussion harmless, except to have plainly instructed the jury that if the decedent was admonished to cease operations in the dangerous place he was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
It has been suggested that the instruction referred to was not excepted to,, as not sufficiently specific, and that no further instructions were asked, also that failure to prohibit the deceased from working in the place of danger was not a matter in issue under the pleadings. The answer to that is that the pleaded facts, as to want of safe working place and failure to warn, by reasonable, if. not necessary, inference covered failure to warn of danger to the statutory extent, and the request to submit the question as to whether the decedent was ordered not to continue at work in the dangerous place was sufficient to challenge attention of the court to the fact that, if such circumstance occurred, deceased was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law and require an instruction to that effect or submission of the question.
A request for submission of a question covering a vital *454matter and refusal duly excepted to, furnish good ground for complaining of want of sufficient instructions, where those given do not cover the subject. Crouse v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 104 Wis. 473, 480, 80 N. W. 752.
From the foregoing it will he seen that the refusal to submit the questions as to warning, particularly the one as to the decedent having been ordered to cease working in the place of danger, was prejudicial error for which the judgment must be reversed.
The further complaint is made that the damages assessed are excessive. That needs attention to aid in closing the litigation without necessity for again appealing. The recovery could not properly exceed the amount of the pecuniary loss to the widow. That must be measured by the present worth of such portion of what decedent would probably have earned had he lived his expectancy of life, as would, with reasonable certainty, have inured to her. On that basis, there does not seem to be good reason for awarding respondent the sum of $7,500. The earning power of decedent was around $425 per year. ITe was thirty-two years of age. His expectancy of life was around thirty-three years. His earning power, on the average, for that period could not fairly he taken at more than $350 per year nor more than $200 beside the necessary outlay for himself. So the limit of pecuniary loss to her was $200 per year during his expectancy of life. It might be much less. Reduced to a reasonable certainty, doubtless the $200 would need to be substantially diminished. Four thousand dollars would purchase an annuity for the widow of $200 per year.
Therefore it seems reasonably certain a jury on the evidence before us might place the recovery as low as $4,000. If the cause were to he remanded with permission to take judgment and avoid a new trial it could not be for more than $4,000. Since it must go hack for a new trial there will be opportunity for a second jury verdict, but as a guide to *455speedy, final determination, it is considered best to say that a recovery on evidence similar to that now here of more than ■$5,000' would he fatally excessive.
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Keewin and Timlin-, JJ., dissent.