Elihinger v. Wolf House Furnishing Co.

72 S.W.2d 144, 230 Mo. App. 648, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 11
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 144 (Elihinger v. Wolf House Furnishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elihinger v. Wolf House Furnishing Co., 72 S.W.2d 144, 230 Mo. App. 648, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 11 (Mo. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*651 McCULLEN, J.

This is an appeal by the employer and insurer from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cape Girardeau County, affirming a final award of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, awarding death benefits to claimants as partial dependents of a deceased employee of the appellant employer.

Claimants having duly filed their claim for compensation, the employer and insurer filed an answer in which they denied that claimants were in any way dependents of the deceased- employee. The cause was heard before a referee of the Workmen’s Compensation on January 19, 1933. At the hearing it was stipulated and agreed by and between the parties that on or about September 9, 1932, the employee sustained an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of *652 his employment with the employer; that the employer and employee were operating under the -Missouri Workmen’s Compensation Law, and that all liability under, such law was fully covered by the insurer; that the .employer had notice of the accident and that the claim for compensation -was duly filed within the time prescribed by law. It was further stipulated and agreed that the employee died on October 20, 1932, as a result of the accident, and that the.employee had worked for the employer for a period of twenty-five and five-sevenths weeks preceding the accident, and had received wages at the. rate of $15 per week during that period. It was also stipulated and agreed that for the purpose of any award, the average weekly wage should be computed at $15, and that the insurer had paid as compensation to the employee, before his death, the sum of $48.05, and had also paid $150 for his funeral expenses.

The testimony at the hearing before the referee, showed that the employee was twenty-one years and eleven months old "at the time of his death; that he was single and unmarried and made his home with his father and mother, the claimants herein; that the members of the household consisted of' Arnold Elihinger, the employee,. Fred Elihinger, the employee’s father, Lonie Elihinger, employee’s mother, and the- employee’s maternal grandmother. Prior to attaining his majority, the employee had been employed by the International Shoe Company, at Cape Girardeau, and the money he received as wages for that employment was given to his mother. He continued.to deliver to his mother the wages he received from that employment until after he reached the age of twenty-one years. In March, 1932, a few months after he was twenty-one years old, he quit his employment at the International Shoe Company and thereafter went to work for the employer herein.

At the time of his death the employee was earning $15 a week, which was almost invariably paid to his father, who would take it home and give it to the mother of the employee, along with $13 a week which the father earned as an employee of the same employer. The combined wages of father and son, totaling $28 per week, thus turned over to the mother of the employee, were kept by her in one pocket-book, and used as a common fund for the payment of rent, for buying clothing for the members of 'the family, for the purchase of groceries and supplies and for the payment of bills, for light and water, as well as other incidental expenses of the home. Sometimes the father paid the rent for the home, and sometimes the mother did so, but whoever paid it, used money out of the common fund made up of the earnings of father and son.

The testimony showed that the earnings of the father and the earnings of the son were never kept separate, but were commingled, and that the money earned by them had always been handled in that man *653 ner from the time the son began to earn money at the age of sixteen years. .

The family occupied a four room house in the City of Cape Girardeau as their home. The son occupied one of the rooms at the home as a bedroom, but also used all the other rooms thereof the same as the other members of the family, and ate at the same table with them.

The testimony showed that the mother took care of the son’s laundry and mending needs, and when the son wanted money for his own use, he would ask his mother for it and she would give it to him out of the common fund; that the average amount of money thus received by the son for his own personal use during the last year of his life did not exceed $2 per week, and was used by him for the purchase of clothing for himself, and for his own incidental personal expenses. The family had an automobile, the title to which was in the son’s name. The father and son each used the automobile individually and for the family’s purposes. The automobile was also used in the employer’s business, but when so used the employer paid for the gasoline and oil consumed.

Claimant Fred Elihinger, father of the deceased employee, testified ; “We did not have any other source of income other than that of myself and my son.” He said that his son did not, at any time, spend much money and that the son had not bought a suit of clothes during the last yeár of his life; that the son would go to a moving picture show not more than three times in a year, including the year before he died.

Other expenses paid out of the common fund, as shown by the testimony, were as follows: For insurance on the son’s life, $5.20 a year; for purchase of the above mentioned automobile, including the first and subsequent part payments, $100; for city and State automobile licenses, $21.50; for tires for the automobile, $10; for gasoline and oil for the automobile, approximately $2.50 per month. The testimony also showed that the minimum value of board and room, in Cape Girardeau, approximately the same as that received by the deceased employee, was $20 per month.

Claimant Lonie Elihinger, mother of the deceased employee, gave testimony to the same general effect as that of her husband. There was other evidence, but it is unnecessary to present it here under the issues involved in this appeal.

On January 23, 1933, the referee made an award in favor of claimants as an estate by the entirety, in the sum of $6 per week for two hundred seventy-nine and one-third weeks, subject to an attorney’s lien of $100, payable at once to Dearmont, Spradling and Dalton, attorneys for the claimants, and also subject to a credit of $48.05, previously paid the deceased by the insurer. The referee found the value *654 of the board furnished the employee, and the money used for his personal expenses amounted to $6.62 per week, thus making the amount of contribution to the dependent parents $8.38 per week, and that said dependents were, therefore, 55-13/15 per cent of a total dependent, which amounted to $1,676 payable-in installments of $6 per week.

Upon an application by the employer and insurer for review of the award, the full commission of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, on March 31, 1933, set aside the award of the referee and made a new award in favor of the claimants as tenants by the entirety fordhe sum of $10 per week for three hundred weeks, and burial expenses of $150, subject to a credit of $48.05 paid to the deceased employee prior to his death, and subject to a credit of $150 for burial expenses paid by the insurer.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 144, 230 Mo. App. 648, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elihinger-v-wolf-house-furnishing-co-moctapp-1934.