Flanagan v. A L & W Moore Trucking Contractors

100 So. 2d 289, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 494
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1958
DocketNo. 8771
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 So. 2d 289 (Flanagan v. A L & W Moore Trucking Contractors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan v. A L & W Moore Trucking Contractors, 100 So. 2d 289, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 494 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action under the Workmen’s Compensation Statute, LSA-R.S. 23:1021 et seq. The plaintiff is the widow of Theo Flanagan, who was accidentally killed July 23, 1953, while discharging his duties in the course of his employment and within the scope of his employer’s business at Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, under a contract of hiring entered into in the State of Louisiana. This action is instituted by plaintiff for and on her own behalf as surviving widow and for the use and benefit of her three minor children, ■ issue of her marriage with the deceased. The defendants are deceased’s employer and the employer’s workmen’s compensation insurer.

The defense tendered is two-fold: (1) That plaintiff and the surviving children were not living with the deceased at the time of his accident and death, and (2) they were not at said time actually dependent upon the deceased or his earnings for support. After trial, the court concluded the defenses were well founded and rejected plaintiff’s demands. From the judgment thus rendered, plaintiff has appealed.

The position of the plaintiff is that (1) she and the children for whom she appears were, within the intent and purpose of the statute, living with the deceased at the time of his accident and death and that they are consequently conclusively presumed to be wholly and actually dependent upon the deceased for support, LSA-R.S. 23 :- 1251; or (2) that, as a fact, at his death they were actually and wholly dependent upon his earnings for support. LSA-R.S. ,23:1231. It appears appropriate, at this time, to note also that under LSA-R.S. 23 :- 1255, “No compensation shall be payable * * * to a widow unless she was living with her deceased husband at the time of the injury or death, or was then actually dependent upon him for support.”

A résumé of the evidence is essential to an understanding and resolution of the issues thus presented. A detailed discussion, however, would serve no beneficial purpose. A statement of the important facts as we find them from the record is deemed sufficient. To the facts thus found we shall endeavor to apply the law applicable thereto.

Plaintiff and deceased were married August 15, 1943, and of their marriage three children were born, namely, Vera Lee, September 20, 1944; Tommy, August 9, 1946, and Barbara Ann, December 26, 1947. They maintained their home and residence at either Bossier City or Shreveport or in those vicinities, where they lived together until September 14, 1948, when plaintiff and the children accompanied plaintiff’s mother to Los Angeles, California, where they have lived ever since in a house with plaintiff’s brother. The husband continued to live in Louisiana, and the two never saw each other again. For a brief vacation period one of the children visited the father. Plaintiff, nevertheless, attended the funeral and later again visited in Shreveport on one occasion.

[291]*291Notwithstanding these facts, plaintiff contends it was neither her nor her husband’s intention to live permanently separated from one another- She testified it was his intention to follow her to California after he had paid some debts and bought a car. No definite plans were ever formulated for resumption of the family relationship, although the husband and wife had lived separate and apart for almost five years. However, true to the adage that absence makes the heart grow fonder — for the other person — long prior to the expiration of this five years, the spark or flame of the husband’s love and affection for his wife had grown dim, if not altogether extinguished, when, in November, 1949, the object of his affection was one Buella Murray, who lived with him as his wife and fulfilled the attributes as such by doing his cooking and washing and bearing a child, born a day prior to his death, in thankfulness for all of which deceased designated Buella Murray as beneficiary in a group life insurance policy, from which she received, after his death, the sum of $2,000.

The above facts appear to be uncontro-verted, but other facts are' in dispute. These pertain to plaintiff’s claim of her contact with her husband through correspondence and as to support claimed to have been extended her and the children in the meantime. Plaintiff testified that she and her husband constantly corresponded; that she wrote him 28 or 29 letters per year and that he wrote her 17 letters per year; that during this time she received from him in cash $150 in 1949, $180 in 1950, $45 in 1951, and $80 in 1952. Thus, she claims that in the 12 months preceding her husband’s death he contributed to her and the children’s support a total of $135. Buella Murray denies both the correspondence and the support claimed by plaintiff, particularly as to the support in that she claims she handled his pay checks in many instances and doubts he forwarded plaintiff either cash or clothes. Plaintiff did not produce any letters that she had received from her husband. However, Flanagan’s mother, to some extent, corroborated plaintiff’s contention as to these matters and testified that the funds with which plaintiff and children moved to California were obtained by plaintiff from her son’s employer and that her son repaid the loan, and that although the sending of cash was discontinued, the husband continued the support by the furnishing of clothing which he purchased and which she forwarded to the children. Whether the exact amounts claimed were furnished by the deceased for the support of his wife and children is not a matter of too great importance for it could only be concluded that the husband did contribute something to their actual support. Whatever support was furnished, however, constituted only a small percentage of the requirements for their living expenses. However, soon after their arrival plaintiff received from the California State Aid the sum of $139 per month until February, 1953, when the amount was increased to $142 per month.

It would appear from the evidence that at the time of plaintiff’s leaving for California there was no intention of a permanent separation. The fact that the husband provided the money for the trip tends to support this view. Deceased’s mother testified that plaintiff and children were to return by Thanksgiving, which passed without their return. The husband then expressed some thought they would surely return by Christmas. Whether plaintiff intended to return to Louisiana and rejoin her husband here at the time she left is a different matter. She says that he was to follow her to California, but, after his failure to do so, the record is barren of any showing of any plans or effort on her part to re-establish marital relations with her husband. The separation was voluntary on her part as was her sojourn in California. Their separation was neither enforced nor continued because of any economic reasons or by any intolerable treatment administered her by her husband. Neither action was taken nor effort made to enforce her husband to a greater contribution towards their [292]*292support. It could only be concluded that whatever idea the parties originally had as to resumption of marital relationship had been forgotten and abandoned. Therefore, the conclusion is inescapable that at the time of the husband’s death he and plaintiff were not living together as man and wife so as to bring her and children within the conclusive presumption of actual dependency upon him or his earnings for support.

Therefore, if plaintiff is to prevail in this action, she must of necessity rely upon the provisions of LSA-R.S. 23:1231, which, so far as pertinent, reads:

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100 So. 2d 289, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-a-l-w-moore-trucking-contractors-lactapp-1958.