Duckett v. Kansas Soldiers' Compensation Board

66 P.2d 410, 145 Kan. 520, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1937
DocketNo. 33,189
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 410 (Duckett v. Kansas Soldiers' Compensation Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duckett v. Kansas Soldiers' Compensation Board, 66 P.2d 410, 145 Kan. 520, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 175 (kan 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

The question in this appeal is whether a soldier’s widow who has remarried can collect the compensation due the deceased soldier which was not paid to him in his lifetime.

The late Ernest Moody was a Kansas soldier who served in the United States Army during the World War. As such he was entitled to compensation for the time of such service under the Kansas statute. (G. S. 1935, 73-102.) Moody died before receiving his compensation. He left a widow, but no children. It is conceded that she would have been entitled to collect the compensation due her husband if she had not remarried. (G. S. 1935, 73-120, 73-142; Elwood v. Soldiers’ Compensation Board, 117 Kan. 753, 232 Pac. 1049.)

The Kansas Soldiers’ Compensation Board disallowed the claim of the appellee on two grounds, but the only one of present concern was thus stated by the appellant:

“The state of Kansas does not pay a bonus to remarried widows of former soldiers, you having been remarried to Henry Duckett, July 7, 1930.”

[521]*521The trial court decided that appellee was entitled to judgment.

The compensation board appeals, contending that since appellee’s remarriage she has no claim against the appellant as the widow of the Kansas soldier, Ernest Moody. In support of this contention appellant cites respectable authority that a widow means “a woman who has lost her husband by death and has not taken another” (68 C. J. 263); “an unmarried woman whose husband is dead” (3 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, 3d Rev., 3454); “a woman who has lost her husband by death; the female survivor of a marital union. A woman who has not remarried after the death of her husband” (Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2d ed.).

Counsel for appellant cite Town of Solon v. Holway, 130 Me. 415, 157 Atl. 236. In that case the statute exempted from taxation the estates of Union soldiers to the value of $5,000, “or to the widows” of such soldiers, sailors or marines. Martha Holway was married to Emerson Joy, a Union soldier, in 1878. He died in 1880, and she married Isaac Holway in 1885. Isaac died in 1924. Thereafter she claimed to be entitled to the statutory exemption of her property from taxation as the widow of her first husband. But the court held otherwise, saying, “On the death of her second husband the defendant became his widow, and did not revert to her former status as the widow of Emerson Joy.” But the court added:

“Cases which might at first glance seem opposed to this principle are distinguishable. In some instances the legislative intent has been to make the statute applicable to a person regardless of her remarriage; and, in others, the term ‘widow’ has been used to designate the person who would on the death of her husband acquire a vested interest, as in the case of a homestead exemption (Brady v. Banta, 46 Kan. 131; Davis v. Neal, 100 Ark. 399), or a vested right such as may be given in the compensation acts (Hansen v. The Brann & Stewart Co., 90 N. J. L. 444.)” (p. 416.)

Looking into these distinguishable cases cited by the supreme judicial court of Maine, in Brady v. Banta, 46 Kan. 131, 26 Pac. 441, this court held that the fact that a widow remarried did not destroy the homestead character of the property which devolved on her and her children on the death of her first husband. In Davis v. Neal, 100 Ark. 399, 140 S. W. 278, it was similarly held that the heirs of a deceased owner of a homestead had no right of possession “during the time it shall be occupied by the widow,” and that the widow’s right of occupancy was not lost, although she remarried, so long as.she and her second husband continued to reside on the property. The court said:

[522]*522“We think that the word ‘widow,’ as used in the act, refers to the person, and not to her state or condition, whether she remains a widow or marries again. The rule is that whenever a right by law is attached to a person by reason of her being a widow, such right remains, unless other words are used in the act, which limit it. If the legislature had intended that her right of homestead should cease when she married again, it would doubtless have used words of that import, such as ‘during her widowhood,’ which would refer to her state or condition, and not to the person, or would have added the words ‘until she marries again’ or ‘so long as she remains unmarried.’ ” (p. 402.)

In Hansen v. Brann & Stewart Co., 90 N. J. L. 444, 103 Atl. 696, which was a workmen’s compensation case, it was held that the remarriage of a widow did not forfeit her vested right to accrued compensation payments for the death of her husband in an industrial' accident, notwithstanding a statutory provision that on her remarriage her further right to weekly payments should cease.

Perhaps a more helpful case than any of the foregoing was that of McDaniel v. Sloan, 157 Tenn. 686, 11 S. W. 2d 894. In that case a World War soldier effected a war-risk insurance policy on his life, naming his father as beneficiary. Later the soldier married Mamie Evans. The father collected the insurance for some years and died, leaving two minor sons, brothers of the deceased soldier. The unpaid balance due on the policy, $3,803, was paid to the administrator of the deceased soldier’s estate. Meantime, Mamie Evans, widow of the soldier, remarried; and the legal question involved in the action was whether the fund should go to her or to the soldier’s brothers as next of kin. Excerpts from the court’s opinion read:

“Neither the policy nor the federal statutes are controlling, further than that the World War veterans act of 1924 provides that, ‘when any person to whom such insurance is now awarded dies or forfeits his rights to such insurance then there shall be paid to the estate of the insured the present value of the remaining unpaid monthly installments of the insurance.’ This provision, as we have seen, has been complied with.
“Looking to the Tennessee statute governing the distribution of the estate of one who dies intestate, it . . . reads as follows: ‘The personal estate as to which any person dies intestate, after the payment of the debts and charges against the estate, shall be distributed as follows: (2) To the widow altogether, if there are no children, nor the descendants of children.’
“(2) The chancellor held that this fund goes to the widow, there being no children. . . .
“We concur with the chancellor. Our statute directs the distribution to be made to one coming within the terms of a definite description applicable as of the date of the death of the intestate. That this person thereafter changes her personal status so as to bring her under a different general definition, does not serve to make uncertain her identity under the statute, any more [523]*523than it would do under a will. It is the duty of the administrator to pay the fund to the party coming within the terms of the statute as of the date of the death of the intestate.
“It is said that this property was not a part of the estate of the intestate at the time of his death and that the statute is so limited.

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 410, 145 Kan. 520, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duckett-v-kansas-soldiers-compensation-board-kan-1937.