Dumond's Case

133 A. 736, 125 Me. 313, 1926 Me. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 133 A. 736 (Dumond's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dumond's Case, 133 A. 736, 125 Me. 313, 1926 Me. LEXIS 59 (Me. 1926).

Opinion

Wilson, C. J.

An appeal from a decree based upon the findings of the Deputy Chairman of the Industrial Accident Commission.

The employee was fatally injured in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. The claimant is the’ father of the deceased employee and the question involved is whether the father was a dependent within the meaning of the Compensation Act, and, if so, to what extent.

Over four years prior to the accident the claimant was the owner of two farms and apparently in comfortable circumstances. At the insistence of the deceased, he sold his two small farms and purchased a larger farm upon the understanding that the deceased would remain at home, when needed, to aid in carrying on the farm, and contribute, so far as he was able, from his earnings outside, toward the payment of the purchase money mortgages; and at the death of the father the farm should become his. The agreement or understanding to this effect, however, was oral and never reduced to writing. The deceased worked at home a part of each year and contributed a part, at least, of his earnings when at work away toward the carrying out of this arrangement.

The purchase price of the farm was eighteen thousand dollars of which six thousand was paid in cash obtained from the sale of the two small farms and the balance of twelve thousand was obtained on two mortgages, one for eight thousand and a second for four thousand dollars.

The new venture, however, proved disastrous financially during the years preceding the accident, as was the case with many other [315]*315farmers during that- period in Aroostook County; and at the time of the accident in August, 1924, the farm was hardly worth the amount of the mortgage indebtedness. The father was also indebted to various other parties in considerable sums, and for a year or more previous to the death of the son was, undoubtedly, insolvent, if forced.to liquidate.

Since the purchase of the farm he had paid the interest on the first mortgage and reduced the principal to seven thousand four hundred and thirty-seven dollars and twenty-three cents. Two hundred and twenty-eight dollars and twenty-nine cents was paid on the principal during the year prior to the accident and from the earnings of the deceased. Nothing had been paid on the second mortgage, not even the interest. The above facts were all found by the Deputy Commissioner who presided at the hearing.

The Deputy Commissioner also found that the claimant was dependent upon the deceased to the full extent of his contributions in cash of three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and the value 'of his labor on the farm upon the ground that the payment of interest on a mortgage may be held to be in the nature of support within the meaning of the act; and held that, inasmuch as the unpaid interest on the second mortgage more than offset the sum paid on the principal of the first mortgage, no reduction should be made by reason of the application of any part of his cash contribution to the payment of the principal of the mortgage indebtedness.

The insurance carrier who prosecutes the appeal contends that inasmuch as the farm was purchased as an investment and in the nature of a business venture, contributions by the deceased in accordance with such an arrangement as was shown to exist in this case, cannot be held to be contributions for support within the meaning of the Act; that financial distress brought on by a bad investment, .while it may produce need of financial assistance, does not, necessarily, result in.dependency under the Compensation Act.

It may well be that contributions to sustain a faffing business venture are not. contributions for support, .but a failure in one’s business may produce a condition that will result in a partial, or even an entire dependence upon others for support. Such a situation, we think the Deputy Commissioner was warranted in finding in the instant case.

[316]*316The business venture on which the father at the suggestion of the son embarked in 1919 had, through a succession of bad crops, resulted in the father being compelled to depend on the aid of his children, not only to save his investment, but for the support of his family. In so far as the contributions were to save the investment in the farm, we think they cannot be regarded as contributions for support, whether applied to the payment of principal or interest. The payment of interest in such a case is not like the payment of interest on a mortgage of a house in which the dependent lives, which may be treated as rent, as has been held in some instances. Milwaukee Basket Co. v. Ind. Com., 173 Wis., 391.

We do not think it was intended under the Compensation Act to compel contributions by an employer to one to whom an injured employee had been furnishing financial assistance to further some business enterprise merely because the person so assisted was dependent on such assistance to save himself from financial loss. Only in so far as the claimant is able to show that he was relying on such assistance at the time of the injury as reasonably necessary for the support of himself and those dependent upon him in a manner suited to their station in life can the employer and the industry be compelled to contribute.

We think the Deputy Commissioner erred in treating as contributions for support payments by the deceased to his father that were applied on the investment in the farm, whether on the principal or in payment of interest, and the testimony of the father was that all the deceased's cash contributions for the preceding year were so applied.

Dependency within the meaning of the Act does not require that one be actually and solely dependent upon the earnings of some one for the bare necessities of life. MacDonald’s Case, 120 Maine, 52, 57; Rhyner v. Hueber Bldg. Co., 156 N. Y. S., 903; nor under the Compensation Act of this state does dependency follow from mere contributions by the injured workman as it apparently does under the Illinois statute. Humphrey v. Indus. Com., 285 Ill., 372; Rockford Cabinet Co. v. Indus. Com., 295 Ill., 332. The Act, however, should be construed liberally, and dependency is held to exist- whenever it appears that the contributions were relied upon by the claimant for his or her reasonable means of support, and suitable to his or her station'in life. In re Stewart, 72 Ind., App., 463; Powers v. Hotel Bond Co., 89 Conn., 143; Blanton v. Wheeler & Howes Co., 91 Conn., 226.

[317]*317As the court said in re Carrol, 65 Ind. App., 146, “To confine the inquiry to the question whether the 'family of the deceased workman could have supported life without any contributions from him, or whether such contributions were absolutely necessary, in order that the family might be reasonably maintained is not a fair test of' dependency; but rather the inquiry should include the question whether the contributions from the workman were looked to, depended and relied on in whole, or in part, by the family for means of reasonable support.” See also In re Peters, 65 Ind., App., 174. McMahon’s Case, 229 Mass., 48.

The test, therefore, is not whether the family could support life without the contributions of the deceased, but whether they in fact reasonably depended upon him in some degree for their means of living according to their position in life. Bradbury’s Workman’s Compensation Law, 2d Ed., Page 571-573; Howells v.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 736, 125 Me. 313, 1926 Me. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumonds-case-me-1926.