1 Contracting Corp. v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board

460 A.2d 374, 74 Pa. Commw. 340, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1628
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 16, 1983
DocketAppeal, No. 849 C.D. 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 460 A.2d 374 (1 Contracting Corp. v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1 Contracting Corp. v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board, 460 A.2d 374, 74 Pa. Commw. 340, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1628 (Pa. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

Thomas Clayton Van Horn, then twenty-one years of age, was, on November 18,1974, killed in the course of performing his duties as a laborer and mechanic for Number 1 Contracting Corporation of West Pittston (employer). Thomas’ mother (claimant) filed a fatal claim petition dated August 29,1975 in which she avers the facts related to her son’s employment and death and that she was financially dependent on her son and is, therefore, entitled to benefits pursuant to -Section 307(5) of The Pennsylvania Workmen’s -Compensation Act, Act of June 2,1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §561(5). Following a number of evidentiary hearings conducted in the summer and autumn of 1976, a referee, in a lengthy written decision entered January 27, 1977, encompassing detailed factual findings and conclusions of law, denied the claimant’s petition. The referee’s findings and conclusions include the follow-lowing pertinent to the issue of the claimant’s dependency on her deceased son:

8. Claimant and her husband had annual gross earnings in the amount of $12,780.58 for the year 1974, or a weekly average income of $245.78.
11. In a statement given by decedent’s father to representatives of decedent’s workmen’s [343]*343compensation insurance carrier on November 29,. 1974,11 days foRowing decedent’s death, he said . . . that the decedent was contributing $30 a week for board, and that the decedent also contributed otherwise such as helping to buy clothes for the mother and children, and Christmas and birthday presents, for an average contribution of about $50 per week; however, at the hearing conducted on November 1, 1976 decedent’s father testified that he really did not know what the decedent gave.
13. To the time of his death, decedent was giving the Claimant between $35 and $40 per week, with no restrictions as to how the money wás to be spent.
14: Decedent was contributing less than 20% of his gross wages to the Claimant, and in return was receiving lodging, meals and use of all facilities within the home.
17. Decedent lived in the home owned by his parents, had full use of all the facilities, and was provided board, meals and lodging.
19. Although iClaimant submitted a Rst of weekly expenses indicating said expenses exceeded her and her husband’s weekly net income including monies contributed by decedent, Claimant testified that the family did not go into debt.
20. The Referee has considerable difficulty in ascertaining the accuracy of the weekly expense list.submitted by the Claimant; for example, the Claimant testified that of the $35 to [344]*344$40 she received from the decedent each week, she pnt $25 aside for payment of fuel oil to heat the home, with the remainder being spent for food; however, the weekly expense list indicates that a weekly sum of $16.15 was used for home heating during 1974, said computation biased on $140 per fill-up multiplied by six and divided by 52.
22. Claimant’s evidence did not clearly establish whether the expenses appearing on the list referring to two motor vehicles, total-ling a sum of $28.08 per week, involved the vehicle used by decedent but owned by the Claimant.
23. Of the $110 sum included in the weekly expense list for food, a certain undetermined portion of same was for food used by decedent, and if the number of resident members is divided equally into the total sum, then approximately $18.34 per week was used to feed the decedent.
24. A sum of $1500 was expended by the Claimant and her spouse for repair and improvement of Claimant’s home in 1974, computed by the Claimant to be an average weekly expense for the year 1974 of $28.85; but said expense was not a continuing one but an isolated long term expense and one which should have been “amortized” over the useful life of said improvement and repair.
27. The combined incomes of Claimant and her husband exceeded those sums used in providihg the ordinary necessities of life to themselves and to their dependent children.
[345]*34528. Decedent’s weekly contributions constituted a payment for services rendered to Mm by tbe Claimant, and were not in tbe nature of contributions needed to provide Claimant with some of the ordinary necessaries of life suitable for persons in her class or position, or necessary to sustain tbe maintenance of tbe family unit on a level to which they were accustomed; said finding is substantiated by tbe actions of decedent’s father in voluntarily leaving bis employment immediately upon bis son’s demise and taking a lesser paying job following a two-week period of no employment, and Claimant’s two non-resident employed children not making contribution to tbe family for maintenance.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
6. Claimant, tbe mother of tbe decedent, failed to prove by sufficient, competent evidence that she was dependent to any extent upon the decedent at tbe time of tbe fatal injury, within tbe meaning of Section 307(5) of tbe Act.

Tbe claimant appealed to tbe Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board from tbe referee’s decision and tbe Board remanded tbe cause for further proceedings which proceedings bad tbe ultimate result of granting tbe prayer of tbe claimant’s Petition. On tbe occasion of tbe employer’s appeal to this Court it is first argued that tbe Board’s decision to remand tbe matter was in error and that tbe referee’s decision should instead have been affirmed. Because we decide that this argument is meritorious we do not reach and do not decide any of tbe issues raised related to actions and decisions of tbe workmen’s compensation authorities [346]*346following the.Board’s order of remand dated August 18,1977.

In the ease of an adult child killed at work, our cases construing Section 307(5) of the Act create'with respect to a parent alleging dependency the burden of showing that the child in fact contributed to the parent’s or household’s expenses and that those contributions

were needed to provide the parents with some of the ordinary necessities of life suitable for persons in their class and position, and that the parents were, consequently, dependent to some extent upon the child at the time of the accident causing his death.

Leipziger v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board, 12 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 417, 315 A.2d 883 (1974). Several additional established principles are helpful in this case. Parents with income in excess of that required for such ordinary necessities of life are not dependent on contributions from their children within the meaning of this Section, Mikalonis v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board, 25 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 166, 361 A.2d 483 (1976). Ordinary necessities do not include such “capital expenditures” as new siding for the claimant’s house or, furniture and amounts expended for such items are not properly chargeable to the claimant’s expenses in the year of the child’s death. DeGuffroy & Associates v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board,

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Bluebook (online)
460 A.2d 374, 74 Pa. Commw. 340, 1983 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1-contracting-corp-v-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-1983.