Workingmen's InsuranceT. Y. Crowell, 1898 - Počet stran: 386 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 76
Strana 3
... latter should feel so under similar circumstances . The great extension of insur- ance within recent years has been due to the perfect- ing of insurance institutions , whereby policy holders are made to feel , not only that they have ...
... latter should feel so under similar circumstances . The great extension of insur- ance within recent years has been due to the perfect- ing of insurance institutions , whereby policy holders are made to feel , not only that they have ...
Strana 10
... latter ac- cidents should be made to rest exclusively upon the employés . It was argued that it was the industry that caused them , and that it was upon the in- dustry that in some way the support of their conse- quences should be made ...
... latter ac- cidents should be made to rest exclusively upon the employés . It was argued that it was the industry that caused them , and that it was upon the in- dustry that in some way the support of their conse- quences should be made ...
Strana 12
... latter instance , the industry is only made to bear the expense of the damages which inevitably result from its conduct , and the expense can fairly be called a legitimate item of the cost of production . Except in the comparatively few ...
... latter instance , the industry is only made to bear the expense of the damages which inevitably result from its conduct , and the expense can fairly be called a legitimate item of the cost of production . Except in the comparatively few ...
Strana 15
... latter , in that members thus insured are constantly enjoying the benefits for which they are making payments , while in the latter they are making deposits for a deferred benefit . In the first case , therefore , PROBLEM OF ...
... latter , in that members thus insured are constantly enjoying the benefits for which they are making payments , while in the latter they are making deposits for a deferred benefit . In the first case , therefore , PROBLEM OF ...
Strana 38
... establishment is thus made to bear its own burdens . Practically , the only difference between the Factory and the Local Association is , that in the former there is only one , while in the latter there 38 WORKINGMEN'S INSURANCE .
... establishment is thus made to bear its own burdens . Practically , the only difference between the Factory and the Local Association is , that in the former there is only one , while in the latter there 38 WORKINGMEN'S INSURANCE .
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
acci accident insurance according administration age and invalidity amount paid ance annual annuity Anzin asso associations Austria average Belgium Caisse cent cerning classes compulsory insurance constitution contributions created day of sickness determined disability dues earning employed employers employés establishment expenses factory France friendly societies Germany granted important increase indemnities industries ingmen injured insurance against accidents insurance against sickness insurance funds insurance institutions insurance of workingmen interest kinds of insurance labor latter liability Manchester Unity membership ment miners mutual-aid societies number of accidents number of persons obligatory old-age insurance Old-Age Pension Bank operations organization payment persons insured pfennigs practically principle question railway receipts and expenditures regards Reichstag reports reserve fund result risk Saint Gall scheme sick insurance sion subsidy surance system of insurance tion total number voluntary insurance wages workingmen against accidents workingmen's insurance
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 268 - Where death results from the injury — (i.) If the workman leaves any dependants wholly dependent upon his earnings at the time of his death, a sum equal to his earnings in the employment of the same employer during the three years next preceding the injury...
Strana 269 - ... a weekly payment during the incapacity after the second week not exceeding fifty per cent, of his average weekly earnings during the previous twelve months, if he has been so long employed, but, if not, then for any less period during which he has been in the employment of the same employer, such weekly payment not to exceed one pound.
Strana 266 - The amount of compensation recoverable under this act shall not exceed such sum as may be found to be equivalent to the estimated earnings, during the three years preceding the injury, of a person in the same grade employed during those years in the like employment and in the district in which the workman is employed at the time of the injury.
Strana 270 - If, within the time hereinafter in this act limited for taking proceedings, an action is brought to recover damages independently of this act for injury caused by any accident and it is determined in such action that the injury is one for which the employer is not liable in such action, but that he would have been liable to pay compensation under the provisions of this act, the action shall be dismissed; but the court in which the action is tried shall, if the plaintiff shall so choose, proceed to...
Strana 269 - Incapacity, and in the case of partial incapacity the weekly payment shall in no case exceed the difference between the amount of the average weekly earnings of the workman before the accident and the average weekly amount which he is earning or is able to earn In some suitable employment or business after the accident...
Strana 262 - ... a crazy bedstead, whereby he was made to fall down while asleep and injure himself; for the negligence of the cook, in not properly cleaning the copper vessels used in the kitchen...
Strana 262 - The master, for example, would be liable to the servant for the negligence of the chambermaid, for putting him into a damp bed; for that of the upholsterer, for sending in a crazy bedstead, whereby he was made to fall down while asleep and injure himself; for the negligence of the cook, in not properly cleaning the copper vessels used in the kitchen; of the butcher, in supplying the family with meat of a quality injurious to the health; of the builder, for a defect in the foundation of the house,...
Strana 262 - They have both engaged in a common service, the duties of which impose a certain risk on each of them ; and in case of negligence on the part of the other, the party injured knows that the negligence is that of his fellowservant and not of his master. He knew, when he engaged in the service, that he was exposed to the risk of injury, not only from his own want of skill or care, but also from the want of it on the part of his fellow- servant ; and he must be supposed to have contracted on the terms...
Strana 309 - ... United States is so far behind other nations. "The most depressing feature of the situation lies in the fact that the very principles involved in this gradual evolution — from the limited liability of employers to that of the compulsory indemnification by them of practically all injured employees — are as yet not even comprehended in the United States. Evidently it is useless to expect any decided legislation until the people generally are made to see the justness and correctness of the position...
Strana 319 - Experience has everywhere demonstrated that the great mass of those workingmen who are poorly off will not voluntarily insure themselves. Furthermore, the great majority of those who would like to do so cannot, on account of the smallness of their earnings. In other words, it is exactly that class which is most in need of insurance that either will not, or cannot avail themselves of this device.