Fordson Coal Co. v. Lewis

98 S.W.2d 63, 266 Ky. 70, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 606
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 63 (Fordson Coal Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fordson Coal Co. v. Lewis, 98 S.W.2d 63, 266 Ky. 70, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 606 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Pike circuit court, affirming-an award made by the Compensation Board in favor of the appellee, on account of the death of Ephriam Siggers while employed by the appellant, Fordson Coal Company.

It is agreed that Ephriam Siggers was killed in the mines of the Fordson Coal Company on November 14, 1930, by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, and that he was then earning sufficient wage to justify his dependents receiving the maximum award under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (sections 4880 to 4987, Kentucky Statutes), which both the employer and the employee had then accepted.

On November 24 next following Siggers’ death, an agreement for compensation was entered into between his widow and the coal company, pursuant to which she was to receive, as his dependent, compensation in the amount of $12 a week for 333 1/3 weeks, which was paid her up to the time of her death on July 17, 1932. This agreement was filed with and approved by the Compensation Board on January 23, 1931.

A further payment of compensation in the sum of $41.12 was paid her administrators, who receipted therefor as a payment made in final settlement of the compensation claim.

Thereafter, the company refusing to pay further compensation to certain minor children of the deceased employee, claiming same as being of the group of his dependents at the time of his death, Annie Louise Sig *72 gers (now Lewis) on January 27, 1934, filed her petition and motion with the Compensation Board to reopen the case, for a modification of the agreement, and that she be adjudged, as a dependent of Siggers, entitled to the remainder of the compensation due under it.

The defendant (here appellant) filed response to the motion, alleging that,-.at the time of Ephriam Siggers ’ (leath, the' plaintiff and claimañtpAnnie Louise Siggers,"waY'moreJhan 16 years of age and was not then a.'member of the household of the deceased, but a member of ’the~ho"usehoId of Reuben Siggers, in Charleston, W. Va., and filed therewith certain supporting affidavits. The board, on February 20, 1934, entered an order denying the motion to reopen, whereupon plaintiff made application for a full board review, in turn filing in support thereof numerous affidavits.

On July 17, 1934,- the board ordered that the case be reopened and that the parties be permitted to take •proof upon the decisive question as tp_the..total-depenidency of Annie Louise Siggers upon her father at the ¡time of his death.

¡j Upon the pleadings and proof so taken, the board - Son June 18, 1935, found claimant was J3qtjma_memiiex of ; hjmhousuhpld andjxd^Tydependent-upon her father,-the -deceased employee, furUi^"Urirpport, and accordingly entered an order adjudging the appellee the remaining compensation due under the appellant’s earlier agreement therefor had with her mother, from July 7, 1932, the date of the death of the widow, until November 17, 1934, the date on which Annie Louise Siggers, the appellee, married.

The defendant coal company thereupon filed motion for a further full board review, which was sustained, when the board on this further review affirmed its award of June 18, 1935.

The appellant coal company, objecting to this ruling, appealed to the Pike circuit court, where, upon trial there had of the proceedings before the board, its award was affirmed.

The coal company, still challenging the propriety of this holding, has further appealed, presenting here r for our review the one question as to whether or not the claimant, Annie Louise Siggers, was, within the mean-ling of the Compensation Act, wholly, dependent upon *73 her father, the deceased employee,, for. her. support and apnember of his household at the time of his accidental .death on November 14, 1930.

It is agreed that the claimant, Annie Louise Siggers, was born on September 2, 1914, and became 16 years of age on September 2, 1930, or about 2% months next before her father’s death.

Further, the pertinent evidence, upon the., question of her,dependency, 'as given by plaintiff and her severaT witnesses, is that on September 7, 1930, she, with her two somewhat older sisters, were carried by her father from their home in McVeigh, Ky., to Charleston, W. Va., where he entered them as students in its high school. Further, plaintiff testified, and is corroborated by a number of her witnesses, that she had never before been sent to this Charleston school nor had lived in or been a member of any other household except that of her father up to the time of his death, and that she had never,.before leaving her father’s home, had any employment, earned any wage or contributed anything whatever towards her own support, but that same" was, up to such time of her father’s death, furnished by him to hems a totally dependent member of his household.

She states that, after going to the high school at Charleston, she was temporarily employed as a substitute for some waitress there for ,about a month, for which service she earned and was paid $5 a week and one daily meal, and that she had also during such time earned 75 cents on two different occasions, when hired by an undertaker.

The hoard,,fin its consideration of this evidence, fqpnd that such brief and inconsequential instances of employment and earning, while there engaged upon her • ■ school work, did not constitute .employment of such character or amount as would deprive her of her right to compensation or affect her status of a total,dependent upjmJhe.r. father, the language of its finding "being as to this that “the mere fact of her having been employed! for a period of four weeks after school hours does not! in the opinion of the board, constitute that character of | employment which would deprive her,of,her.....right toK.7 compensation as a dependent.”

As stated supra, this ruling of the board was affirmed by the Pike circuit court, to which appealed for review.

*74 •j Upon this evidence, it is.appellant’s contention, and ¡earnnstlydnsistedjupon, that snch earnings and sporadic '¡employment were of such consequence and "materiality I as To constitute claimant a wage earner, contributing in g; to her support, from which'it followed that claim-was thus prevented from being properly adjudged ejutal'ly dependent for support upon her father, and ¡ as" Eere controlling the recent ease of James E. Pepper & Co. v. Travis, 260 Ky. 725, 86 S. W. (2d) 683.

After considering the facts found in that case, upon which a ruling of only -partial dependency was made, we are of the opinion that'They serve to present so different a condition of household relationship as to distinguish it from that here presented.

There the right to compensation, growing out of the death of Stanley Travis, an employee, was involved. The facts shown were that the deceased, Stanley Travis, was a member of a household of five, which included an aunt, Jennie, and a sister, Dorothy.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 63, 266 Ky. 70, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fordson-coal-co-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1936.