Fish v. Industrial Commission

472 P.2d 97, 12 Ariz. App. 486, 1970 Ariz. App. LEXIS 695
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJune 23, 1970
Docket1 CA-IC 327
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 472 P.2d 97 (Fish v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Industrial Commission, 472 P.2d 97, 12 Ariz. App. 486, 1970 Ariz. App. LEXIS 695 (Ark. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

STEVENS, Judge.

The single issue before the Court is the propriety of the award which denied the claim of the minor stepchildren of the deceased employee, a claim asserting the right to death benefits. This claim was decided under the law as it existed prior to 1 January 1969.

Although the claim of the widow was allowed, we will herein refer to her as the petitioner. The minor children, whose claim for death benefits is the subject of the matter now before the Court, will be referred to as the children. The mother of the petitioner, who is the grandmother of the minor children, will be referred to as the grandmother. The deceased employee, Vance Fish, will be referred to as the employee.

Western Pine Sales, Inc., will be referred to as the employer and L. D. Porter who was the president of the employer will be referred to as the employer’s president. The other respondents will be referred to as the Commission and as the Fund respectively.

The Commission entered its first award on 7 October 1968. This was entered by a majority vote of the then three-man Commission. Commissioner Murphy and Commissioner Ahearn approved the award and Commissioner Thoeny disapproved the award. Thereafter a five-man Commission was created and after a further hearing the second award, the one now before this Court, was entered on 18 July 1969. Commissioners Murphy, Thoeny and Bailey approved the award and Commissioner Ahearn disapproved the award.

In both awards it was found:

That the employee met his death in an airplane crash on 31 October 1967 while in the course of his employment; and that the employee “left surviving him and totally dependent upon him for support at the time of said injury” which resulted in his death, the petitioner herein.

The first award included the children as being totally dependent and the second award found that the children “are not entitled to death benefits.”

On 31 October 1967, the children were of the approximate ages of 5 years and 314 years.

*488 In the early stages of the processing of the claims for death benefits, the thrust of the resistance to the claims was an assertion that the injury to the employee and his resulting death did not arise out of and in the course of his employment. The employee had worked for his employer as a lumber salesman for several years. The employer owned the airplane involved in the fatal accident and the employee was the only licensed pilot working for the employer. The date of the accident was to be the final date of his employment. We are not informed as to the length of the notice which the employee had given to his employer prior to his contemplated leaving of the employment. The issue as to the injury and the death were resolved by the first award and this issue is no longer contested.

THE MARITAL STATUS

Both the petitioner and the employee were married to other spouses prior to their marriage to each other on 14 October 1967. The prior marriages of the petitioner and of the employee appear to be important to all of the respondents before this Court.

The petitioner and her former husband, the father of the children, were married in November 1961. At least as early as November 1966 they were not living together. The petitioner filed a complaint for divorce in Maricopa County Superior Court, Cause No. 95232. We have not been informd as to the date of the filing. She testified that her former husband had been ordered to pay pendente lite child support. This was not disputed. The payments were directed to be made through the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court. The petitioner testified that the pendente lite payments had not been made. The records of the Clerk of the court were not produced to refute this statement. The divorce decree was introduced into evidence. It recites a hearing on 7 July 1967, the signing of the decree on 27 July 1967 and the filing thereof on 1 August 1967. The decree provides for child support of $50.00 per month for each child, payable through the office of the Clerk. The petitioner testified that no payments were made prior to 31 October 1967. The records of the Clerk were not called for. The petitioner testified that there was an order of the Court directing that an income tax refund be endorsed over to her. This was not disputed. She testified that she turned the refund check over to her attorney in partial payment of the attorney’s fees due in connection with the divorce. There was also testimony that the petitioner’s first husband was not steadily employed and that at times his whereabouts were not known.

The employee, as the plaintiff, filed a suit for divorce in the Superior Court in Maricopa County. This was Cause No. 96161. We are not informed as to the date of filing. The decree recites that there was a property settlement agreement bearing date of 31 August 1967. The property settlement agreement is not before us. The employee’s then wife was granted an uncontested divorce on her counterclaim by decree signed and filed 13 September 1967. The decree recites that there were three children born to the marriage. One of the children had been emancipated by age and the other two had been emancipated by marriage. There was a limited award of alimony.

THE PETITIONER’S EMPLOYMENT

In 1966 the petitioner sought employment as a receptionist in an apartment building known as the Camelback Towers, herein referred to as the Towers. Her application disclosed that she was a married woman with two children. Her employment commenced on 1 November 1966. Her initial net salary was $62.85 a week. The apartment manager testified that her hearsay information was that the petitioner was without material assets and that the petitioner “ * * * complained a lot, that is why she got a raise.”

While in her employment, the petitioner rented an apartment in the Towers ef *489 fective 1 April 1967 and occupied the apartment with her children and the grandmother. Her initial rent was $192.00 a month. Later she occupied a different apartment for which the rent was $184.00 a month. The grandmothers’ income was from Social Security.

On the request of the employee, the petitioner resigned her employment with the Towers on 9 June 1967 and thereafter she received two checks from the Towers, one for $74.55 and the other for $31.48. There is no evidence that the petitioner had further gainful employment. There was evidence from two witnesses that the petitioner was being considered for an office job in the employer’s office so that she could learn something about the lumber business. This was not refuted.

THE PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP

At a time when both the petitioner and the employee were separated from their respective spouses, and the employee’s divorce action was in process in the Superior Court, the petitioner and the employee met for the first time. The petitioner’s suit for divorce carried a lower case number and must also have then been pending. These parties met at the Towers after the petitioner, her children and the grandmother had moved there on 1 April 1967. The apartment manager testified that the petitioner’s first husband never lived in the Towers.

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Bluebook (online)
472 P.2d 97, 12 Ariz. App. 486, 1970 Ariz. App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-industrial-commission-arizctapp-1970.