Ashland Iron Mining Company v. Fowler

271 S.W. 580, 208 Ky. 422, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 271 S.W. 580 (Ashland Iron Mining Company v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland Iron Mining Company v. Fowler, 271 S.W. 580, 208 Ky. 422, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 21 (Ky. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

Appellant and plaintiff below, Ashland Iron & Mining Company, operates an industrial plant in Ashland, Kentucky, and on and prior to November 24, 1919, Louis Fowler was in its employ. Both the employer and employee had accepted the provisions of our Workmen’s Compensation Act and on that day Fowler sustained an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment from the results of which he lost an eye. He applied to the compensation board and was awarded $12.00 per week for 120 weeks. On the first day of January, 1920, he went back to work and for a few days did not labor at his old job, but returned to it shortly thereafter and continued at it, receiving the same wages until the 27th day of May following, when he quit on account of sickness and died on June 3, 1920. His family physician certified to the Registrar of Vital Statistics that he died of “double bronchial pneumonia; contributing or sec *424 ondary causes, age and overwork.” But little more than 26 of the 120 weeks for which he was allowed compensation for loss of his eye had been paid up to his death, and the compensation board ruled that the right to such compensation was personal to the employee, and ceased upon his death, and was not an asset going to either his estate or his dependents; and the testimony in the case establishes conclusively to our minds that Mrs. Fowler, the widow and defendant herein, was notified of that fact, although she denies having received a letter written by the chairman to tfyat effect, but on cross-examination she substantially admitted it. The letter written by the chairman of the board so informing her was a joint one addressed to her and to plaintiff’s attorney through whom compensation payments under the board’s award had theretofore been made. That attorney, who was the chairman of the first Workmen’s Compensation Board under our statutes (the Honorable R. T. Caldwell), testified in the case, as well as a number of other witnesses, and their testimony with other facts and circumstances proven, together with the admissions' of Mrs. Fowler on her cross-examination, shows conclusively to our minds that she was aware of the termination of the compensation payments after the death of her husband. However, if we should be mistaken in that conclusion, the rights of the parties under the question presented would not be affected thereby, as will hereinafter more fully appear.

The plaintiff maintained a fund which it denominated “Subscriptions and Charities Account,” from which it, in its discretion, would donate to or pension worthy employees or their dependents if the employee was killed, and it determined after the death of Fowler to continue to pay his dependents, who were Ms widow and some infant children, the remainder of the award made by the board to Fowler in his lifetime, and such payments were made to the widow in a different manner and by a different person thereafter until some time in February, 1922, which was the expiration of the 120' weeks. Shortly after the ceasing of the payments so made out of the “Subscriptions and Charities Fund,” the widow made application to the compensation board for death benefits under the statute, claiming that her husband’s death was the natural and direct result of the injury sustained by her husband. Plaintiff herein contested the right to such an award upon the grounds that Fowler’s death did not result, either remotely or otherwise, from *425 the injury received by him; and in another paragraph it relied on the limitation of one year from the death within which application for death benefits should be made, as is provided by section 33 of the act, now section 4914 of 1922 edition of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes. In avoidance of the plea of limitation, the dependents, by and through the widow, relied on the last literary clause of that section saying: “If payments of compensation as such have been made voluntarily the making of a claim within such period shall not be required, but shall become requisite following the suspension of such voluntary payments. ’ ’

After a hearing, in which evidence was introduced, the board allowed compensation to the dependents of the deceased in the maximum amount fixed by the statute, but credited it with the sums paid by the employer oiit of the “Subscriptions and Charities Fund.” A petition for a review of that finding was filed in the Boyd circuit court, where the award of the board was affirmed and the petition for a review was dismissed, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

At the beginning it may be stated that the finding of the board that the death of the decedent was the result of the accident to his eye was, to say the least of it, against the great preponderance of the evidence, and it is somewhat doubtful if there was enough substantial probative evidence of that fact to authorize that finding, even under the rule provided in the statute and followed by us that, if there is any evidence to sustain the board’s .finding, it will not be reviewed by the court. We are not alone in that conclusion, since the learned judge of the circuit court who rendered the judgment appealed from, in passing upon the case said: “But the court must say in justice to its own sense of right and its own perception of the facts in the case it does not concur in the conclusions of the board that the death of Fowler was caused by the injury to.his eye in question.” However, we have concluded, out of abundant caution, not to encroach upon the province of the board as outlined in the statute and to accept, for the purpose of the opinion, its finding that the death of the deceased resulted from the effects of his injury and to dispose of the appeal upon that hypothesis.

As we have seen, the dependents sought to avoid the limitation plea upon the ground that plaintiff, the employer, continued to pay the compensation allowed by the board to the deceased in his lifetime out of the ‘ ‘ Sub *426 scriptions and Charities Fund,” and that such payments operated to toll the limitations until they were suspended. But clearly, the facts in this case do- not bring it within the terms of the quoted clause of the statute, since we have seen those payments were not made as compensation, but only as a gratuity in the nature of a limited pension. It is true they were Voluntarily made, but not in discharge of “compensation, as such;” and clearly, they were not so made by the employer whose motive only in making them is, doubtless, the one intended by the statute, and not the opinion or belief of the one receiving them. But, if we should be mistaken in that conclusion, then, as we again repeat, there was no substantial evidence to show that the payments made by plaintiff after the death of deceased were done in any other manner than as we have above outlined. So that, it is our conclusion that the clause of the statute relied on is not available to avoid the limitation plea.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 580, 208 Ky. 422, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-iron-mining-company-v-fowler-kyctapphigh-1924.