Davis v. Mitchell

98 S.W.2d 474, 266 Ky. 151, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 625
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 474 (Davis v. Mitchell) 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
Davis v. Mitchell, 98 S.W.2d 474, 266 Ky. 151, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 625 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

*152 On June 12,1925, Le Roy Mitchell was an employee of the appellant, S. W. Davis, in the latter’s rock quarry in Breckinridge county, Ky. Our Compensation Statute (Ky. Stats. 1930, sec. 4880 et seq.) had been accepted by both. On that day Mitchell was accidentally killed while serving his master in the course of his employment and which arose out of it. About six months prior thereto he and his wife, Jennie Mitchell, separated, and shortly thereafter she moved to Ironton, Ohio, where her relatives lived and where she and Le Roy Mitchell were married. At the time of the separation she agreed with her husband that the latter should have custody and control, as well as possession, of their two youngest children, Carl and Harvey Mitchell, the. first of whom was borrqin 1912 and’the latter in 1919, and was, therefore, six'years old when his father died, while Carl (who is prosecuting this action as next friend of his brother, Harvey) was thirteen years of age at the time of his father’s .death. The latter delivered both of them into the possession of his cousin, Lillian Carney, a married woman.residing at Omar, W. Ya., but shortly after the death.of _Le Roy Mitchell his son Carl left the home of Lillian Carney and went to live with his mother in Iron-ton, Ohio. She did not learn of her husband’s death for quite awhile thereafter, and in about two years from his death the youngest son of the two Mitchells (appellee) left the home of Lillian Carney and went to his mother at her home in Ohio. So that, neither the mother, Jennie Mitchell, nor either of her two sons,. Carl. and Harvey, have resided in the state of Kentucky since the death of the husband and father.

In February, 1935, and after Carl had arrived at age, he, as his brother’s next friend, made application according to the forms prescribed by our Workmen’s Compensation Act to the Compensation Board for an award on behalf of his infant brother, Harvey, as ..^dependent on his deceased father.

■ The claim was resisted before- the board by the employer, the appellant, here, but the board overruled all of the objections, the chief .one. of which was that the right attempted to he asserted was barred, since it was begun nine years, five months and twenty-five days after the death-of applicant’s father. In due time the employer filed his review petition in the Breckinridge circuit court, pursuant to the provisions of section 4935 of *153 our Statutes, and the award of the board at that hearing was affirmed. It is from that judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

It is virtually conceded in briefs for appellant that the only question involved possessing materiality is that made by the defense of delay in making the application until the time had expired when it might be done under the statute. Ordinarily, and when the applicant is a dependent and sui juris, the procedure to obtain compensation under our statute must be made within the time pointed out in our recent opinion of Scott Tobacco Company v. Cooper, 258 Ky. 795, 81 S. W. (2d) 588. In it we interpreted section 4914 of our Statutes, which is section 33 of the Compensation Act, to apply only to the time within which a demand should be made of the employer for compensation in an effort to agree thereon, and which should be done within one year from the date of the accident. If the parties do not agree and it becomes necessary to make an application to the board, then the provisions of section 4932 furnishes the remedy. We interpreted that section in the case referred to as giving the injured servant, or his dependent if he was killed, one year after application had been made to the employer for the parties to agree, and if they did not agree within a year following the application to the employer compulsory action before the board should be filed with it. The interpretated limitations in that opinion do not apply to the facts of this case, unless Jennie Mitchell, the mother of appellee, voluntarily abandoned her husband in the early part of 1925 when they separated, and thereby destroyed her right as a dependent upon him, under the provisions of section 4894 of our Statutes, which in prescribing those who “shall be presumed to be wholly dependent upon a deceased employee” says that “A wife upon a husband whom she had not voluntarily abandoned at the time of the accident. * • * * A child or children under the age of sixteen years, or over sixteen years if incapacitated from wage-earning, upon the parent with whom such child or children are living or by whom actually supported at the time of the accident.”

The proof in this case is amply sufficient to show that Harvey Mitchell was an infant dependent upon his father at the time of the latter’s death,within the provisions of the-statute; but he had no guardian or com *154 mittee, or parent residing in the state of Kentucky, nor either of such fiduciaries residing elsewhere, and his mother was a nonresident of the state, as we have seen.

Section 4919 of our Statutes, being section 38 of the Compensation Act, prescribes that “no limitation of time provided in this act shall run against any person who is mentally incompetent or who is a minor depend ■ ent so long as he has no committee, guardian or next friend, or other persons authorized to claim compensation for him under sec. 4909 of this act.” The latter section (4909) provides, inter alia, that “In cases where the dependents are a widow or other head of a family of minor children and one or more minor children, it shall'be sufficient for the widow or head of such family to make application for compensation on behalf of all, and in cases where the dependents are mentally incapacitated or are minors the head of whose family is not a dependent, the application may be made by the committee, guardian or next friend of such dependents.”

It will be observed that in order for the widow or other head of the family of minor children to be qualified to enforce the provisions of the Compensation Act for the benefit of such minor dependents she or he (widow or the head of a family) should themselves be a dependent. If they are not such, then they would clearly be disqualified to maintain any procedure looking to the recovery of compensation for the benefit of any minor dependents in their charge (except as next friend), and which conclusion is in accordance with the very terms of the statute. We have already seen that under other sections of the act a surviving widow is a dependent upon her deceased husband only when she had not voluntarily abandoned him before his accidental death. If she voluntarily abandoned him prior to that event, then she ceased to be a dependent upon him and would not be entitled to any compensation allowed by the statute, or recoverable thereunder. Cases so construing the sections of the statute, as indicated, are: Lockhart’s Guardian v. Bailey, Pond Creek Coal Co., 235 Ky. 278, 30 S. W. (2d) 955; McIntosh v. John P. Gorman Coal Co., 253 Ky. 160, 69 S. W. (2d) 7; Clover Fork Coal Co. v. Scroggins, 263 Ky. 424, 91 S. W. (2d) 543, and others cited in those opinions. Some of those opinions, as well as the case of Ashland Iron & Mining Co. v. Fowler, 208 Ky. 422, 271 S. W. 589, also hold that the widow of a de *155

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 474, 266 Ky. 151, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mitchell-kyctapphigh-1936.